Outrageous Predictions
Die Grüne Revolution der Schweiz: 30 Milliarden Franken-Initiative bis 2050
Katrin Wagner
Head of Investment Content Switzerland
Chief Investment Strategist
Summary: Nvidia delivered a blockbuster quarter, reinforcing that AI infrastructure demand remains strong. However, the market is reacting in a more measured way than earlier in the cycle, suggesting Nvidia is less of a single “AI bellwether” for the entire complex than it was in 2024. As the AI story matures, volatility and dispersion across the value chain can persist, which is why some investors consider diversifying exposures rather than relying on a single AI momentum factor.
Nvidia reported record quarterly revenue of $68.1bn (up 20% quarter-on-quarter and 73% year-on-year), with Data Center revenue of $62.3bn (up 22% QoQ and 75% YoY) remaining the dominant driver. Reported gross margin was ~75% for the quarter, and full-year fiscal 2026 revenue was $215.9bn (up 65% YoY).
The company’s outlook for the next quarter implied continued momentum (revenue guided to ~$78.0bn ±2%, with management noting it is not assuming Data Center compute revenue from China in that outlook).
Overall, these numbers were consistent with ongoing demand for AI compute and supported the view that the AI-related capex theme remains relevant.
Key risks to monitor include:
Markets often react to results relative to expectations and valuation, not only to the headline beat. A more muted post‑earnings move can be consistent with (i) elevated expectations already being priced, and (ii) a more mature cycle where investors focus on demand quality, mix, and margins.
A related observation is that post‑earnings reactions in Nvidia have tended to be less pronounced than earlier in the cycle—for example, double‑digit moves in parts of 2024 versus roughly ±3.5% across the last three quarters.
Not necessarily. Nvidia’s results can support confidence in the infrastructure buildout, but they do not determine which sectors or business models ultimately benefit (or face pressure) as AI adoption broadens. Disruption risks tend to be uneven, sector-specific, and time‑varying.
That is likely. One way investors are framing the market is a shift from an early-cycle phase—when broad AI capex announcements supported much of the ecosystem—to a later-cycle phase, where attention is now increasingly on monetisation, spending discipline, and profitability pathways.
In this environment, market focus can become more granular, often centred on:
As these factors are debated quarter-to-quarter and week-to-week, price action can become more differentiated across companies rather than moving as a single theme.
Nvidia remains a leader, but the market may be less likely to treat all AI-related assets as one momentum bundle. The next phase may involve greater dispersion between:
The distinction matters because the economics and demand signals can look different.
Because the mix can shift over time, investors may track what that implies for utilisation, pricing dynamics, and the pace of investment across the broader stack (for example, networking and data‑centre infrastructure).
Common watchpoints include:
“Cheaper” is not the same as “cheap.” A lower multiple versus prior peaks can reduce some valuation pressure, but the relevant question is whether future growth and margins can sustain the expectations embedded in the current price.
Investors often look at:
A neutral, risk‑managed framework some investors use:
Important disclosure: This material is provided for information purposes only and does not constitute investment advice, a recommendation, or an offer to buy or sell any financial instrument. Views are general in nature, may change without notice, and forward‑looking statements are subject to uncertainty. Past performance is not a reliable indicator of future results.