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Rarely has a single company’s earnings report been so closely watched by Wall Street as a make-or-break moment for the broader market.
Nvidia, the chipmaker whose central role in the global artificial intelligence arms race has turned it into one of the world’s most valuable companies, reported its much-anticipated quarterly results Wednesday. It posted $39.3 billion in revenue, up a hefty 78% for the quarter that ended in January and ahead of analysts’ expectations.
But for many investors and analysts, the wildly profitable company’s financials reveal more than just the state of Nvidia’s own operations. And many are likely to take notice of the chipmaker’s forward-looking statements Wednesday, which signaled slowing profit-margin growth.
The chip giant’s importance is due to two major factors: its sizable valuation (meaning that its stock price can weigh heavily on the market as a whole, including the blue-chip Dow Jones Industrial Average) and its role in the AI sector (which now factors heavily into broader U.S. economic growth).
Ahead of the earnings, Dan Ives, a managing director and senior equity research analyst at Wedbush Securities, said it would be a “massive day” for global markets looking to “gauge the demand trajectory of the AI Revolution.” Among X’s more finance- and tech-focused crowd, the earnings had caused enough anticipation to spark some tongue-in-cheek jokes.
As if to underscore just how on edge traders were, Nvidia’s stock price swung higher and then lower and then higher again in the minutes right after the report came out. As of about 5 p.m. ET, the shares were up about 2% from where they closed Wednesday afternoon.
Brand-name tech firms looking to build out their AI capabilities have purchased Nvidia’s graphics processing unit (GPU) chips by the heap — a buying spree that has turbocharged the company’s share price. Between the start of 2023 and the end of 2024, Nvidia’s stock climbed some 880%, making it at the time the most valuable publicly traded U.S. firm, with a market capitalization over $3 trillion. Thanks to that surge, Nvidia is now the second-most-important component of the S&P 500 index, behind only Apple.
Nvidia’s earnings are heavily scrutinized as a barometer for the economy at large, the growth of which during the past two years has been powered in large part by investments in AI and data center capacity. Yet so far this year, Nvidia shares were down 5% heading into its earnings report amid growing doubts about whether the breakneck pace of global AI investment could be sustained.
This week, a report emerged that Microsoft, one of Nvidia’s largest customers, was pulling back on its data-center spending. Microsoft has since denied that — and many of Nvidia’s other key customers, including Google parent Alphabet, Facebook parent Meta and Amazon, all plan to make significant investments.
Nvidia, and the AI landscape in general, has also been shaken by the seemingly sudden rise of DeepSeek, a China-backed AI platform that reportedly requires far fewer computing resources — and mostly taps chips made by Nvidia rival Intel.
More broadly, the U.S. economy is showing signs of a slowdown amid questions about the strength of consumers and the prospect of higher inflation tied to President Donald Trump’s plans to impose tariffs.