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Nvidia is still selling an awful lot of artificial-intelligence chips. What the company doesn’t sell may end up getting more attention when it reports results on Wednesday afternoon. Last month, [Nvid
Nvidia's Q1 2025 earnings, set for release after market close on May 28, are projected to showcase significant AI-driven revenue growth.
Analysts expect the Santa Clara, California-based company to report quarterly earnings at 88 cents per share, up from 61 cents per share in the year-ago period. Nvidia projects to report quarterly revenue at $43.54 billion, compared to $26.04 billion a year earlier, according to data from Benzinga Pro.
Nvidia’s surge lifts S&P 500 and Nasdaq, but a court ruling on Trump-era tariffs tempers gains and adds uncertainty to US stock market forecasts.
Lastly, Nvidia delivered where it counts. After reporting $27 billion in full-year sales in fiscal 2023, its revenue skyrocketed to $130.5 billion in fiscal 2025. In the current fiscal year, the consensus of nearly five-dozen analysts is almost $200 billion in sales.
Nvidia reported solid fiscal first-quarter earnings late Wednesday but provided a revenue forecast for the July quarter that was below expectations. Here's what we learned from the highly-anticipated report: Solid earnings.
Nvidia beat quarterly sales expectations as customers stockpiled its AI chips before fresh U.S. curbs on China exports took effect, but the same restrictions will slice off $8 billion in sales from the company's current quarter,
Nvidia's quarterly earnings and revenue beat Wall Street's expectations nearly every quarter over the past two years.
Stocks turned mostly lower Thursday and pared earlier gains as Wall Street faced more uncertainty following a federal trade court ruling that said the Trump administration didn’t have the authority to impose tariffs on virtually every country.