pwshub.com

Nvidia stock slips after earnings, forecasts top estimates amid 'incredible' demand for its next-gen chip

AI juggernaut Nvidia (NVDA) reported second quarter earnings after the bell on Wednesday that beat expectations on the top and bottom line, while its forecast for the current quarter also came in ahead of expectations.

Nvidia reported adjusted earnings per share of $0.68 on revenue of $30 billion in its fiscal second quarter. Analysts were expecting EPS of $0.64 and revenue of $28.8 billion. That marks a 122% increase on the top line from a year ago; earnings rose 168% from the same quarter last year.

The company also provided third quarter revenue guidance of $32.5 billion plus or minus 2%. Analysts were looking for $31.9 billion.

Shares of the chip giant were down about 3.5% in after-hours trading following the results. The stock fell as much as 6% in immediate reaction to the numbers.

The bulk of that revenue came from Nvidia’s all-important data center business, which brought in $26.3 billion in the quarter versus Wall Street's expectations of $25 billion in revenue. That's a 154% increase from the same period last year when the segment brought in $10.3 billion.

In a statement, CEO Jensen Huang said anticipation for the company's next-generation Blackwell chip is "incredible."

CFO Colette Kress said in a statement, "Blackwell production ramp is scheduled to begin in the fourth quarter and continue into fiscal 2026. In the fourth quarter, we expect to ship several billion dollars in Blackwell revenue."

Kress's statement added that the company "executed a change to the Blackwell GPU mask to improve production yield."

The company expects shipments of its current Hopper chips to "increase" in the second half of the year.

Nvidia also announced Wednesday a $50 billion increase in its share buyback authorization. The company had $7.5 billion remaining on its existing authorization at the end of the quarter.

Nvidia's gaming division, which used to stand as the company's breadwinner, saw revenue of $2.8 billion up 16% year over year.

Nvidia is the world leader in AI chip design and software, controlling between 80% and 95% of the market, according to Reuters.

The company has also been key to the current AI trade on Wall Street, with almost half of its revenue tied directly to tech giants like Microsoft, Amazon, Google, and Meta.

Nvidia’s rivals aren’t resting on their laurels. Earlier this month, AMD announced it is acquiring ZT Systems in a deal valued at $4.9 billion. The move gives AMD more firepower to build out AI system servers, something that’s been a major catalyst for Nvidia’s own sales.

And while it could provide AMD with a boost in sales, it doesn’t mean Nvidia will face any major threats to its reign as the AI king anytime soon.

"There are emerging competitors like AMD that are starting to take a little bit of market share," Stifel managing director Ruben Roy told Yahoo Finance Monday. "But when you look at the overall infrastructure spend cycle … which we think is going to continue to increase, Nvidia appears to us as the best positioned to benefit from [spending]."

Subscribe to the Yahoo Finance Tech newsletter. (Yahoo Finance)

Email Daniel Howley at dhowley@yahoofinance.com. Follow him on Twitter at @DanielHowley.

For the latest earnings reports and analysis, earnings whispers and expectations, and company earnings news, click here

Read the latest financial and business news from Yahoo Finance.

Source: finance.yahoo.com

Related stories
1 month ago - Stocks tumbled Thursday after a run of weak economic data and another sell-off in chip stocks weighed on some of the names leading the hot AI trade.
1 month ago - The global sell-off in stock markets deepened as US unemployment hit a three-year high amid growing fears that the US Federal Reserve has left it too late to begin cutting interest rates.
1 month ago - (Bloomberg) -- Earnings from Apple Inc. and Amazon.com Inc. will be critical to give direction to the Nasdaq 100 after a volatile period marked by some of the benchmark’s worst — and best — days this year.Most Read from BloombergUS...
1 month ago - Super Micro Computer (NASDAQ: SMCI), more commonly known as Supermicro, has been one of the market's hottest artificial intelligence (AI) stocks....
1 month ago - The yen was a tad softer against the dollar in trading thinned by a Japanese holiday on Monday, with market participants still ambivalent about the odds of a big Fed rate cut next month. The respite follows a tumultuous week that began...
Other stories
13 minutes ago - Trump maintains a roughly 60% stake in Trump Media & Technology Group, which trades on the Nasdaq under the ticker symbol "DJT."
14 minutes ago - Dividend investing took a back seat ever since the AI-led craze caused everyone to pile into technology growth stocks. However, long-term investors seeking a stable and reliable income stream always look for strong dividend payers that...
14 minutes ago - It’s easy to think that once someone hits billionaire status, they'd just buy whatever they want with cash – especially something as basic as a home. But even the world's wealthiest, like Elon Musk, Mark Zuckerberg and Jay-Z, have taken...
14 minutes ago - On Wednesday, the Federal Trade Commission said Ryan Cohen, managing partner of RC Ventures and Chairman and CEO of GameStop Corporation (NYSE:GME), will pay a $985,320 civil penalty. This fine stems from charges that Cohen violated the...
50 minutes ago - Coming into 2024, the enterprise technology space buzzed with speculation on the future following VMware LLC’s acquisition by Broadcom Inc. Analysts and experts mused on how Broadcom would handle the portfolio direction for VMware’s many...