The news: Nvidia’s latest earnings report shows that spending on AI infrastructure remains strong, even as some metrics normalize after explosive growth.
- Q2 FY26 revenues rose 56% YoY, marking the ninth consecutive quarter where Nvidia’s sales grew more than 50%.
- CFO Colette Kress said the “big four” hyperscalers—Google, Microsoft, Amazon, and Oracle—are on track to collectively spend $600 billion on data centers and hardware this year, reinforcing Nvidia’s central role in the AI race.
Despite robust numbers, Nvidia’s stock dipped slightly on Thursday, owing in part to the market’s excessive expectations of the industry giant.
Zooming out: Fears of an AI investment bubble persist, most recently echoed by OpenAI CEO Sam Altman.
- Yet, Nvidia’s results suggest large-scale investment in AI infrastructure is far from cooling.
- CEO Jensen Huang stated that Nvidia is still in the early stages of its capital expenditure build-out.
Expecting too much? Having been crowned in Q2 as the first company to reach a $4 trillion valuation, Nvidia has become the market barometer for the broader tech sector, and even the stock market as a whole. With sky-high investor standards for its financial results, even strong numbers can feel like a letdown.
- Those expectations may be so high that solid growth can feel like a slowdown, as reflected by the slight decline in Nvidia's stock value.
- Nvidia may be a victim of its own success as investors look for perfection, not just improvement.
Overseas battle: Nvidia reported no chip sales to China and excluded the region from its Q3 forecasts. However, Kress noted that if geopolitical tensions calm down, the company could generate between $2 billion and $5 billion in hardware sales there as early as next quarter.
Still, Nvidia’s absence in China highlights how geopolitics can disrupt earnings. With billions of potential revenues sidelined, ongoing tensions mean investors need to factor long-term volatility into expectations.
Our take: Nvidia is still riding the AI wave but is entering a more complex phase as expectations outpace results. If investment outruns adoption or monetization, the sector risks overkill. The test will be whether user demand and AI application development can keep pace with this level of spending.
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