AI_chip

Nvidia vs gravity, part two: did the earnings call keep the AI dream afloat?

Quarterly earnings
Ruben Dalfovo
Ruben Dalfovo

Investment Strategist

Key takeaways:

  • Nvidia beat expectations again, with AI data centre demand still doing most of the heavy lifting.

  • A 65 billion USD revenue outlook keeps the AI build-out story alive into 2026.

  • Concentrated customers, tighter rules and a rich valuation are now the main risks around the Nvidia story.


Setting the scene: one print, global consequences

When one company is worth more than 4 trillion USD and carries the biggest weight in the S&P 500, its earnings move global indices. Nvidia now sits at the heart of both the AI trade and the benchmark that many passive investors own.

Ahead of the release, the shares closed on 19 November at 186.52 USD, up 2.9% on the day but still lower over the week as traders trimmed AI exposure. After the numbers, the stock jumped about 5% in after-hours trading, showing how much sentiment still leans on one name.

So the question for most investors is simple. What do these results say about the AI cycle, future market leadership and how much of our savings are already tied to one story?

Inside the quarter: chips, cash and concentration

Nvidia’s third-quarter revenue came in at 57 billion USD, up 62% year on year and ahead of the roughly 55 billion USD expected Bloomberg analysts. Adjusted earnings per share (EPS) were 1.30 USD, beating the 1.26 USD consensus.

The engine is still data centres. Revenue there reached 51.2 billion USD, up 66% year on year and about 90% of total sales. Cloud providers and AI specialists are still racing to add capacity, and Nvidia remains the key supplier of the chips and systems that power that race.

Margins and profits show how much of that demand turns into value. Non-GAAP gross margin stood at about 73.6%, a touch below a year ago but higher than last quarter. Net income climbed to roughly 31.9 billion USD, up 65% year on year. This is fast growth with very high profitability.

Capital returns now matter too. Over the first nine months of fiscal 2026, Nvidia sent about 37 billion USD back to investors through buybacks and dividends, with more than 60 billion USD still authorised. AI is giving the company room to invest heavily while still behaving like a cash compounder.

Guidance was the real stress test. Management guided for fourth-quarter revenue of roughly 65 billion USD, plus or minus 2%, ahead of Bloomberg analyst expectations, and a non-GAAP gross margin around 75%. In plain English, customers are still queueing for the new generation of Blackwell chips and Nvidia still has pricing power.

Reading the AI cycle through the market leader

Nvidia has become the clearest read on AI infrastructure spending that public markets have. It sells into Microsoft, Amazon, Alphabet and a growing list of AI specialists, so its order book is a rough poll of how confident big buyers feel about demand through 2026.

This quarter’s message is that demand is still broad and deep. Management talked about “off the charts” interest in new Blackwell systems and pointed to a visible pipeline of roughly half a trillion dollars of processor sales over the next couple of years. Customers are planning for larger models and heavier usage, not stepping back.

Workload mix is slowly shifting too. Early AI builds focus on training, which is lumpy and tied to big model launches. Over time, more spend should tilt to inference, the everyday running of AI inside search, advertising, office software and industrial tools.

On top sits software and networking. Nvidia’s AI Enterprise stack, networking tools and libraries make it harder for customers to switch even if rivals close the hardware gap. As software and services grow faster than pure hardware, the company looks less like a cyclical chip name and more like an AI platform.

Where the risks are hiding

Valuation is the obvious starting point. After this move, Nvidia’s market value again sits well above 4 trillion USD. The shares now price in several more years of rapid growth and very high margins, so even small disappointments can trigger sharp swings.

Customer concentration sits close behind. A large part of Nvidia’s data centre revenue still comes from a handful of hyperscale buyers and leading AI labs. If any of them delay projects, press harder on pricing or shift more work toward in-house accelerators, Nvidia’s growth rate could slow even if the wider AI trend stays healthy.

Regulation and geopolitics also matter. Export controls limit what Nvidia can sell into China, and there is live debate in Washington over how tight those rules should become. Power, land and grid connections also constrain how quickly new data centres can be built.

Narrative risk is the final layer. Talk of an AI bubble has not gone away, even after another beat and strong outlook. When a stock is this widely owned and this closely watched, changes in the story can move prices faster than fundamentals.

Investor playbook: using Nvidia as a signal, not a shortcut

  • Compare the share price move to the size of the beat. A big swing on modest surprises signals either euphoria or fatigue.

  • Listen for how often management name checks key cloud and AI customers. Rising reliance on one or two buyers raises single-customer risk.

  • Watch the split between data centre and everything else. A slowly broader revenue base would make Nvidia less hostage to a single theme.

  • Track valuation anchors such as forward price to earnings (P/E) and free cash flow yield versus its own history and selected peers. When those stretch, the growth story has to stretch too.

For long term investors, the goal is not to trade every quarterly twitch, but to use each print to reassess how much AI risk is already baked into portfolios, often through index funds and tech heavy products.

What Nvidia’s quarter really tells investors

This quarter was another gravity test for the AI boom, and Nvidia again cleared the bar. Revenue, profits and guidance all point to an ecosystem that is still building, not shrinking.

The deeper message is about concentration. A growing slice of global equity returns now hangs from one company and one story. For most people, the better question is not “should I chase Nvidia today” but “how much of my savings already depends on it”. If Nvidia keeps beating gravity, it can pull markets higher for a while longer. If it finally stumbles, the real shock will not be that a high flyer fell, but that so many investors forgot it could.

 

 


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