Nvidia earnings
Nvidia earnings drew plenty of analyst praise despite a mixed market reaction, and the company’s report offered strong signals about AI momentum and future visibility. Below are the five biggest highlights from the latest results.
Why Nvidia earnings matter
Nvidia reported fiscal third-quarter revenue of $57 billion, beating the FactSet consensus of $54.9 billion and up 62% year over year. The company guided the current quarter to $65 billion, topping the FactSet consensus of $62.17 billion. Analysts saw the numbers and commentary as evidence of robust demand, a competitive roadmap and clearer visibility into next-year trends.
Robust demand and CEO commentary
Investors were looking for reassurance about customer spending, and Nvidia delivered with CEO Jensen Huang describing demand as “off the charts.” Bernstein’s Stacy Rasgon noted that Nvidia talked up competitiveness and a strong product roadmap while reaffirming revenue and gross-margin trajectories into next year — signals that could support a “stronger for longer” outlook on AI demand.
Blackwell Ultra leading, Rubin on track
CFO Colette Kress said Blackwell Ultra is now the company’s “leading architecture across all customer categories,” even as the prior Blackwell chips still see solid demand. Nvidia also signaled a “fast” ramp of its Rubin platform in the second half of next year. Susquehanna’s Christopher Rolland had noted Blackwell Ultra carried higher average selling prices.
Strong visibility and margin outlook
Nvidia reiterated visibility into $500 billion in revenue from its Blackwell and Rubin AI platforms through next year, which analysts said implies a materially higher data-center sales run-rate. Management projects gross margins to stay in the mid-70s range next year, despite rising component costs. An outlook Rasgon said removes a potential overhang. Rasgon raised his price target to $275. Wedbush’s Matt Bryson and William Blair’s Sebastien Naji echoed that the $500 billion projection and steady margin target leave room for upside and reflect Nvidia’s pricing power.
Networking is a rising star
Data-center networking revenue reached $8.2 billion in the October quarter, a 162% year-over-year increase. Analysts view networking growth and other data-center adjacencies as important ways for Nvidia to outgrow overall AI spending and expand total addressable market.
Management addresses AI-bubble and useful-life concerns
Jefferies’ Blayne Curtis said the results and management comments should steady the AI trade, particularly around debates on GPU depreciation timelines. Management stressed chips are fully utilized in the cloud and that older A100 GPUs remain in full use. Kress noted A100 GPUs shipped six years ago are still running at full utilization today. That pushback on useful-life worries aims to calm investor concerns about potential profit-risk from shorter-than-expected GPU lifecycles.
Final takeaways on Nvidia earnings
Analysts found plenty to like. A clear demand narrative, leading architectures with Blackwell Ultra, Rubin’s ramp timeline, strong networking growth. And a margin outlook that suggests resilience versus rising input costs. While the stock moved intraday, the earnings print gave Wall Street signals that Nvidia sees sustained AI momentum and meaningful visibility into the next year.
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