Latest news with #HopperAI
Yahoo
a day ago
- Business
- Yahoo
Nvidia stock falls as Trump says China 'violated' trade deal with US
Nvidia (NVDA) stock dropped as much as 2% Friday morning after US President Trump claimed that China had 'totally violated' an agreement with the US. The tech-heavy Nasdaq (^IXIC) fell 0.3%, while the S&P 500 (^GSPC) was down just 0.1% late Friday morning. "The bad news is that China, perhaps not surprisingly to some, HAS TOTALLY VIOLATED ITS AGREEMENT WITH US," Trump said in a post on Truth Social. "So much for being Mr. NICE GUY!" The US and China agreed to temporarily reduce sky-high tariff rates in mid-May after a meeting between US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and Chinese Vice Premier He Lifeng in Switzerland. In what the White House called a 'historic deal,' the US dropped its duties on China to 30%, while China decreased its tariff on the US to 10% and agreed to 'suspend or remove the non-tariff countermeasures.' But late Thursday, Bessent said in an interview with Fox News that US-China trade talks were 'a bit stalled.' Trump did not give further details about how China had violated its preliminary agreement with the US, but US Trade Representative Jamieson Greer echoed the president's sentiments in an interview with CNBC Friday, saying that 'the Chinese are slow rolling their compliance.' While Nvidia was largely unscathed by the import tax on Chinese goods enacted in April — since most of its chips are made in Taiwan and then manufactured in servers in that country or Mexico — the company took a $5.5 billion hit from the Trump administration's separate, recent ban on sales of its chips to China. Nvidia makes specialized, lower performance versions of its Hopper AI chips for the China market called H20. Nvidia revealed in its latest quarterly earnings report this week that it lost $2.5 billion in sales in the first quarter due to the ban and expects another $8 billion loss in the second quarter. 'China is, and will remain the largest overhang on NVDA shares until we get resolution from the Trump administration,' DA Davidson analyst Gil Luria said in a note to investors Thursday. China is one of Nvidia's biggest markets. Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang said the company has no new products planned for the Chinese market. 'We don't have anything at the moment, but we're considering it,' he told analysts following the company's earnings release Wednesday. 'Obviously, the limits are quite stringent at the when the time comes, we'll engage the [Trump] administration and discuss that.' Some on Wall Street remain optimistic about Nvidia's China prospects. 'We remain convinced that there will be at least some recovery of the China opportunity,' wrote Morgan Stanley analyst Joseph Moore in a note to investors Thursday. Even with Friday's drop, Nvidia stock was on track to notch a more than 3% gain for the trading week. Nvidia shares rose 3% Thursday after the AI chipmaker reported first quarter revenue that surpassed Wall Street's expectations despite the China-related headwinds. Laura Bratton is a reporter for Yahoo Finance. Follow her on Bluesky @ Email her at Error while retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error while retrieving data Error while retrieving data Error while retrieving data Error while retrieving data
Yahoo
2 days ago
- Business
- Yahoo
US imposes new rules to curb semiconductor design software sales to China
It appears the Trump administration has imposed new export controls on chip design software as it seeks to further undermine China's ability to make and use advanced AI chips. Siemens EDA, Cadence Design Systems and Synopsys all confirmed that they have received notices from the U.S. Commerce Department about new export controls on electronic automation design (EDA) software to China. EDA tools are primarily used to aid with the design and validation of semiconductor manufacturing, testing, and for monitoring performance and quality. They are used by chip foundries, chipmakers, networking hardware companies, the automotive industry, and many more. Siemens EDA, a division of German tech conglomerate Siemens, told TechCrunch that it has received a notice from the Commerce Department's Bureau of Industry and Security (BIS) last week about new export controls on EDA software to China and Chinese military end users. "Siemens has supported customers in China for more than 150 years and will continue to work with our customers globally to mitigate the impact of these new restrictions while operating in compliance with applicable national export control regimes," the company said. U.S.-based Synopsys, which also makes EDA software, said on Thursday that it had also received a similar letter from the BIS. The company also suspended its forecast for the third quarter and full-year 2025. Cadence also received a notice from the BIS saying a license is now required for "the export, re-export or in-country transfer of electronic design automation software" to customers in China. The news was first reported by The Financial Times. The new export rules come as the U.S. ramps up its efforts to hinder Chinese companies as the battle for AI supremacy heats up. But these export controls are increasingly hurting the U.S. chip industry, which has long enjoyed significant market share in China. Nvidia alone has incurred billions in losses due to restrictions on sales of its H20 and Hopper AI chips to Chinese customers. The company, along with rival AMD, is even said to be working on selling lower-powered versions of its AI chips to Chinese customers. The U.S. Commerce Department did not immediately return a request for comment outside regular business hours. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data
Yahoo
3 days ago
- Business
- Yahoo
Nvidia earnings live: Nvidia stock pops as Wall Street looks through China sales hit
Nvidia (NVDA) stock popped more than 5% in premarket trading Thursday after the poster child for artificial intelligence reported mixed first quarter results after the close on Wednesday. Positive signals from Nvidia and CEO Jensen Huang about AI infrastructure demand and the Blackwell ramp-up eclipsed an $8 billion revenue hit from the US's China export rules, according to the initial reaction from Wall Street. "There is one chip in the world fueling the AI Revolution and it's Nvidia," Wedbush's Dan Ives, one of Wall Street's biggest tech bulls, wrote in a note Wednesday. "That narrative is clear from these results and the positive commentary from Jensen." According to HSBC analyst Ryan Mellor, the results "were good enough to avoid disappointment." The AI hardware giant reported revenue of $44.1 billion for the quarter, topping analyst estimates of $43.3 billion, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Nvidia reported $26 billion in the same period last year. Adjusted earnings per share, excluding the charge for the H20 chips, were $0.96, beating estimates for $0.93 and surpassing earnings per share of $0.61 last year. Data center revenue fell slightly short of estimates, coming in at $39.1 billion versus $39.2 billion estimated and $22.5 billion last year. Investors also zeroed in on an expected $8 billion revenue hit in the second quarter related to export rules, which banned shipments of its H20 chips to China. In an interview last week, Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang said the company had lost $15 billion in sales as a result of these rules. "The $50 billion China market is effectively closed to US industry," Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang said about the restrictions. "We are exploring limited ways to compete, but Hopper is no longer an option. China's AI moves on with or without US chips." The company's results have been powered by chip investments from some of its Big Tech peers, including Microsoft (MSFT), Amazon (AMZN), and Meta Platforms (META). Here's the latest: Nvidia's (NVDA) first quarter results left much to be desired, but it looks like Wall Street is shaking off the obvious bad news for now, Yahoo Finance's Brian Sozzi reports. Read more here on what Wall Street is saying about Nvidia's quarter. Nvidia's post-earnings call with investors was highly focused on the chipmaker's billions in lost revenue from Trump's ban on its chip exports to China. Nvidia has made specialized chips called H20 — based on the company's prior-generation Hopper AI graphics processing units (GPUs) — for export to China to comply with ever-tightening US export controls. Huang said the company will "see if we can come up with interesting products that could continue to serve the Chinese market" but said "we don't have anything at the moment." The China market accounted for a smaller share of Nvidia's revenue in the first quarter than the prior two periods — 12.5% for the three months that ended on April 27, compared with roughly 14% and 15% in the prior two quarters, respectively. Read more about Nvidia's hit from the Trump administration's new export ban here. Nvidia's earnings call just wrapped up, and the stock remains solidly higher. Shares are up over 4% just after 6 p.m. ET. We have some early reaction to Nvidia's report from one of Wall Street's biggest tech bulls, Wedbush analyst Dan Ives. In a note titled, in part, "The Godfather of AI Delivers Again," Ives called the quarter "very robust" despite clear headwinds from US curbs on its China sales. The report should be "music to the ears of tech bulls listening to this conference call," Ives wrote. Ives also highlighted recent Middle East deals as a growth catalyst despite the China headwinds. "There is one chip in the world fueling the AI Revolution and it's Nvidia. ... That narrative is clear from these results and the positive commentary from Jensen," he said. While Nvidia executives lamented lost revenue from China in the quarter, Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang offered support for President Trump's aim of building manufacturing capacity in the US. "In Houston, we're partnering with Foxconn to construct a million-square-foot factory to build AI supercomputers," he said. "Wistron is building a similar plant in Fort Worth, Texas. To encourage and support these investments, we've made substantial, long-term purchase commitments, a deep investment in America's AI manufacturing future." "Our goal, from chip to supercomputer, built in America within a year." Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang remarked on the Trump administration's ban on a less powerful version of its Hopper chips for China during a call with analysts following its first quarter earnings results: Listen live to the Nvidia earnings call here. The earnings call has begun, and Nvidia CFO Colette Kress noted that Big Tech companies continue to ramp up data center spending. "Major hyperscalers are each deploying nearly ... 72,000 Blackwell GPUs per week, and are on track to clear ramp output this quarter," Kress said. "Microsoft, for example, has already deployed tens of thousands of Blackwell GPUs and is expected to ramp to hundreds of thousands of GB200s with OpenAI as one of its key customers." Listen live to the Nvidia earnings call here Nvidia's (NVDA) latest quarterly earnings — which as a whole topped Wall Street's estimates — showed the company expects to see $8 billion in lost revenue from the Trump administration's ban on sales of its H20 AI chips to China in the second quarter (which ends in late July). That's on top of the $2.5 billion of revenue from the H20 ban the chipmaker said it lost in the first quarter (which ended April 27). That means Nvidia is set to lose $10.5 billion in revenue due to the ban in the first and second quarters of its 2026 fiscal year alone. The Trump administration effectively banned sales of Nvidia's chips to China in early April, weeks before the end of its first quarter. Nvidia's sales to China (including Hong Kong) during the period totaled $5.5 billion, less than the $6.2 billion expected, according to Bloomberg data. That means China accounted for more than 12% of the company's total revenue. Nvidia also said it took a $4.5 billion charge due to a write-down in inventory (chips it produced but now can't sell) in the first quarter due to the new export rules — less than the $5.5 billion hit expected. "We are still evaluating our limited options to supply data center GPU products compliant with the US government's revised export control rules," said CFO Colette Kress. "Losing access to the China AI accelerator market, which we believe will grow to nearly $50 billion, would have a material adverse impact on our business going forward, and benefit our foreign competitors in China and worldwide." Singapore was once again the second-largest market for Nvidia, which gets over half of its revenue (53%) from abroad. Revenue from the region was roughly $9 billion. Notably, Singapore has been a source of chip smuggling to China. Listen live to the Nvidia earnings call here. Hyperscalers, including Microsoft (MSFT), Amazon (AMZN), and Meta Platforms (META), continued to power Nvidia's results. "We saw our Blackwell architecture ramp expand to all customer categories, while large cloud service providers remained our largest at just under 50% of Data Center revenue," the company reported in its quarterly filing. Shares of Nvidia's "Magnificent Seven" Big Tech peers — Apple (AAPL), Alphabet (GOOGL, GOOG), Microsoft (MSFT), Amazon (AMZN), Meta (META), and Tesla (TSLA) — didn't swing significantly after Nvidia's earnings. Other than Nvidia, Tesla led after-hours gains in the tech stock complex, rising 1.3%, while Apple was roughly flat. The others were up less than 1%. Nvidia (NVDA) stock jumped more than 3%, as Wall Street saw strength in the chipmaker's quarter. 'I thought it was a really strong quarter, all things considered,' Benchmark Company managing director Cody Acree told Yahoo Finance (see video below). "Given all the issues with China and all of the concerns about slowing capital budgets, to see the company come in with an $8 billion loss for the Chinese revenue and still come within the marginal range of estimates, I think is a victory," Acree added. Nvidia reported record revenue of $44.1 billion in the first quarter. While that marks a 69% increase over the prior year, it pales in comparison to the 262% revenue growth the AI chip giant reported a year ago. Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang said Wednesday in the company's earnings release: Nvidia's first quarter results on Wednesday came in a bit shy of Wall Street estimates, with adjusted earnings per share and revenue in its data center business falling short of expectations. In the first quarter, Nvidia earned $0.96 per share on an adjusted basis, which excludes charges related to export controls and associated tax implications, with headline revenue coming in at $44.1 billion. Diluted earnings per share came in at $0.81. Wall Street expected the company to report adjusted earnings per share of $0.88 on revenue of $43.3 billion, according to estimates from Bloomberg. A year ago, Nvidia reported adjusted EPS of $0.61 on revenue of $26 billion. Nvidia's data center business — which captures spending on its AI chips — tallied revenue of $39.1 billion, just below the $39.22 billion forecasted by the Street. Shares of the company were up about 3% in extended trading in immediate reaction to the numbers. Nvidia (NVDA) stock has rallied hard in May, gaining 24% in the past month. That leaves many investors wondering if it's a good time to pile into the stock ahead of the chip giant's earnings report. We've pointed out here that Nvidia stock tends to swing 7% in either direction the day after it reports. My colleague Laura Bratton has also noted that Nvidia's earnings often surprise Wall Street. According to tastylive founder and CEO Tom Sosnoff, volatility in the stock is low, even heading into earnings, suggesting that "the expectations are for something rangebound to happen." Sosnoff outlined several key points investors should keep in mind when determining whether to invest in a popular name like Nvidia: Pros: "It's super liquid," Sosnoff said on Wealth. "It's got a very liquid derivatives marketplace. So you can do lots of different strategies and things like that." Sosnoff also pointed out that Nvidia remains a market leader. "It's the bluest of all blue chips right now," he said. Cons: A major con, according to Sosnoff, is that "it's a crowded trade. Nvidia is pretty fully priced." He added that "for the first time, we're not seeing any call skew in there, which means that the derivatives markets, which are pretty good at pricing upside expectations, are kind of mixed right now. They're saying, 'you know what, upside and downside, we have similar expectations.'" "So I think the con is that if Nvidia misses, there's pretty decent pot odds that the downside move could be greater than the upside move if they hit it," he explained. Yahoo Finance's Josh Schafer highlighted one chart that shows how Nvidia became the dominant chipmaker and one of the most valuable companies in the world, with a market capitalization of over $3 trillion: Check out more charts like this that show Nvidia's rise. Yahoo Finance's Laura Bratton reports: Read more here. The countdown to Nvidia's earnings has begun. Beyond the top and bottom line figures, which Wall Street expects to be solid, Yahoo Finance's Brian Sozzi and Brooke Sweeney have compiled three things that investors should watch out for: Read more here. Nvidia stock (NVDA) opened modestly higher ahead of its earnings report but fluctuated in early trading. At last check, shares were down 0.3%. While some volatility is expected, investors will be watching to see how Nvidia trades around earnings — and whether its "Magnificent Seven" tech peers and the broader market move in tandem, as AI is seen as an engine to the growth of the recent bull market. Nvidia's earnings will also create an important benchmark for other AI plays and stocks tied to the technology, such as utilities and companies involved in data center infrastructure. FT reports: Read more here. Reuters reports: Read more here. Nvidia's (NVDA) first quarter results left much to be desired, but it looks like Wall Street is shaking off the obvious bad news for now, Yahoo Finance's Brian Sozzi reports. Read more here on what Wall Street is saying about Nvidia's quarter. Nvidia's post-earnings call with investors was highly focused on the chipmaker's billions in lost revenue from Trump's ban on its chip exports to China. Nvidia has made specialized chips called H20 — based on the company's prior-generation Hopper AI graphics processing units (GPUs) — for export to China to comply with ever-tightening US export controls. Huang said the company will "see if we can come up with interesting products that could continue to serve the Chinese market" but said "we don't have anything at the moment." The China market accounted for a smaller share of Nvidia's revenue in the first quarter than the prior two periods — 12.5% for the three months that ended on April 27, compared with roughly 14% and 15% in the prior two quarters, respectively. Read more about Nvidia's hit from the Trump administration's new export ban here. Nvidia's earnings call just wrapped up, and the stock remains solidly higher. Shares are up over 4% just after 6 p.m. ET. We have some early reaction to Nvidia's report from one of Wall Street's biggest tech bulls, Wedbush analyst Dan Ives. In a note titled, in part, "The Godfather of AI Delivers Again," Ives called the quarter "very robust" despite clear headwinds from US curbs on its China sales. The report should be "music to the ears of tech bulls listening to this conference call," Ives wrote. Ives also highlighted recent Middle East deals as a growth catalyst despite the China headwinds. "There is one chip in the world fueling the AI Revolution and it's Nvidia. ... That narrative is clear from these results and the positive commentary from Jensen," he said. While Nvidia executives lamented lost revenue from China in the quarter, Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang offered support for President Trump's aim of building manufacturing capacity in the US. "In Houston, we're partnering with Foxconn to construct a million-square-foot factory to build AI supercomputers," he said. "Wistron is building a similar plant in Fort Worth, Texas. To encourage and support these investments, we've made substantial, long-term purchase commitments, a deep investment in America's AI manufacturing future." "Our goal, from chip to supercomputer, built in America within a year." Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang remarked on the Trump administration's ban on a less powerful version of its Hopper chips for China during a call with analysts following its first quarter earnings results: Listen live to the Nvidia earnings call here. The earnings call has begun, and Nvidia CFO Colette Kress noted that Big Tech companies continue to ramp up data center spending. "Major hyperscalers are each deploying nearly ... 72,000 Blackwell GPUs per week, and are on track to clear ramp output this quarter," Kress said. "Microsoft, for example, has already deployed tens of thousands of Blackwell GPUs and is expected to ramp to hundreds of thousands of GB200s with OpenAI as one of its key customers." Listen live to the Nvidia earnings call here Nvidia's (NVDA) latest quarterly earnings — which as a whole topped Wall Street's estimates — showed the company expects to see $8 billion in lost revenue from the Trump administration's ban on sales of its H20 AI chips to China in the second quarter (which ends in late July). That's on top of the $2.5 billion of revenue from the H20 ban the chipmaker said it lost in the first quarter (which ended April 27). That means Nvidia is set to lose $10.5 billion in revenue due to the ban in the first and second quarters of its 2026 fiscal year alone. The Trump administration effectively banned sales of Nvidia's chips to China in early April, weeks before the end of its first quarter. Nvidia's sales to China (including Hong Kong) during the period totaled $5.5 billion, less than the $6.2 billion expected, according to Bloomberg data. That means China accounted for more than 12% of the company's total revenue. Nvidia also said it took a $4.5 billion charge due to a write-down in inventory (chips it produced but now can't sell) in the first quarter due to the new export rules — less than the $5.5 billion hit expected. "We are still evaluating our limited options to supply data center GPU products compliant with the US government's revised export control rules," said CFO Colette Kress. "Losing access to the China AI accelerator market, which we believe will grow to nearly $50 billion, would have a material adverse impact on our business going forward, and benefit our foreign competitors in China and worldwide." Singapore was once again the second-largest market for Nvidia, which gets over half of its revenue (53%) from abroad. Revenue from the region was roughly $9 billion. Notably, Singapore has been a source of chip smuggling to China. Listen live to the Nvidia earnings call here. Hyperscalers, including Microsoft (MSFT), Amazon (AMZN), and Meta Platforms (META), continued to power Nvidia's results. "We saw our Blackwell architecture ramp expand to all customer categories, while large cloud service providers remained our largest at just under 50% of Data Center revenue," the company reported in its quarterly filing. Shares of Nvidia's "Magnificent Seven" Big Tech peers — Apple (AAPL), Alphabet (GOOGL, GOOG), Microsoft (MSFT), Amazon (AMZN), Meta (META), and Tesla (TSLA) — didn't swing significantly after Nvidia's earnings. Other than Nvidia, Tesla led after-hours gains in the tech stock complex, rising 1.3%, while Apple was roughly flat. The others were up less than 1%. Nvidia (NVDA) stock jumped more than 3%, as Wall Street saw strength in the chipmaker's quarter. 'I thought it was a really strong quarter, all things considered,' Benchmark Company managing director Cody Acree told Yahoo Finance (see video below). "Given all the issues with China and all of the concerns about slowing capital budgets, to see the company come in with an $8 billion loss for the Chinese revenue and still come within the marginal range of estimates, I think is a victory," Acree added. Nvidia reported record revenue of $44.1 billion in the first quarter. While that marks a 69% increase over the prior year, it pales in comparison to the 262% revenue growth the AI chip giant reported a year ago. Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang said Wednesday in the company's earnings release: Nvidia's first quarter results on Wednesday came in a bit shy of Wall Street estimates, with adjusted earnings per share and revenue in its data center business falling short of expectations. In the first quarter, Nvidia earned $0.96 per share on an adjusted basis, which excludes charges related to export controls and associated tax implications, with headline revenue coming in at $44.1 billion. Diluted earnings per share came in at $0.81. Wall Street expected the company to report adjusted earnings per share of $0.88 on revenue of $43.3 billion, according to estimates from Bloomberg. A year ago, Nvidia reported adjusted EPS of $0.61 on revenue of $26 billion. Nvidia's data center business — which captures spending on its AI chips — tallied revenue of $39.1 billion, just below the $39.22 billion forecasted by the Street. Shares of the company were up about 3% in extended trading in immediate reaction to the numbers. Nvidia (NVDA) stock has rallied hard in May, gaining 24% in the past month. That leaves many investors wondering if it's a good time to pile into the stock ahead of the chip giant's earnings report. We've pointed out here that Nvidia stock tends to swing 7% in either direction the day after it reports. My colleague Laura Bratton has also noted that Nvidia's earnings often surprise Wall Street. According to tastylive founder and CEO Tom Sosnoff, volatility in the stock is low, even heading into earnings, suggesting that "the expectations are for something rangebound to happen." Sosnoff outlined several key points investors should keep in mind when determining whether to invest in a popular name like Nvidia: Pros: "It's super liquid," Sosnoff said on Wealth. "It's got a very liquid derivatives marketplace. So you can do lots of different strategies and things like that." Sosnoff also pointed out that Nvidia remains a market leader. "It's the bluest of all blue chips right now," he said. Cons: A major con, according to Sosnoff, is that "it's a crowded trade. Nvidia is pretty fully priced." He added that "for the first time, we're not seeing any call skew in there, which means that the derivatives markets, which are pretty good at pricing upside expectations, are kind of mixed right now. They're saying, 'you know what, upside and downside, we have similar expectations.'" "So I think the con is that if Nvidia misses, there's pretty decent pot odds that the downside move could be greater than the upside move if they hit it," he explained. Yahoo Finance's Josh Schafer highlighted one chart that shows how Nvidia became the dominant chipmaker and one of the most valuable companies in the world, with a market capitalization of over $3 trillion: Check out more charts like this that show Nvidia's rise. Yahoo Finance's Laura Bratton reports: Read more here. The countdown to Nvidia's earnings has begun. Beyond the top and bottom line figures, which Wall Street expects to be solid, Yahoo Finance's Brian Sozzi and Brooke Sweeney have compiled three things that investors should watch out for: Read more here. Nvidia stock (NVDA) opened modestly higher ahead of its earnings report but fluctuated in early trading. At last check, shares were down 0.3%. While some volatility is expected, investors will be watching to see how Nvidia trades around earnings — and whether its "Magnificent Seven" tech peers and the broader market move in tandem, as AI is seen as an engine to the growth of the recent bull market. Nvidia's earnings will also create an important benchmark for other AI plays and stocks tied to the technology, such as utilities and companies involved in data center infrastructure. FT reports: Read more here. Reuters reports: Read more here. Sign in to access your portfolio
Yahoo
3 days ago
- Business
- Yahoo
Nvidia earnings live: Nvidia stock pops as Wall Street looks through China sales hit
Nvidia (NVDA) stock popped more than 5% in premarket trading Thursday after the poster child for artificial intelligence reported mixed first quarter results after the close on Wednesday. Positive signals from Nvidia and CEO Jensen Huang about AI infrastructure demand and the Blackwell ramp-up eclipsed an $8 billion revenue hit from the US's China export rules, according to the initial reaction from Wall Street. "There is one chip in the world fueling the AI Revolution and it's Nvidia," Wedbush's Dan Ives, one of Wall Street's biggest tech bulls, wrote in a note Wednesday. "That narrative is clear from these results and the positive commentary from Jensen." According to HSBC analyst Ryan Mellor, the results "were good enough to avoid disappointment." The AI hardware giant reported revenue of $44.1 billion for the quarter, topping analyst estimates of $43.3 billion, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Nvidia reported $26 billion in the same period last year. Adjusted earnings per share, excluding the charge for the H20 chips, were $0.96, beating estimates for $0.93 and surpassing earnings per share of $0.61 last year. Data center revenue fell slightly short of estimates, coming in at $39.1 billion versus $39.2 billion estimated and $22.5 billion last year. Investors also zeroed in on an expected $8 billion revenue hit in the second quarter related to export rules, which banned shipments of its H20 chips to China. In an interview last week, Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang said the company had lost $15 billion in sales as a result of these rules. "The $50 billion China market is effectively closed to US industry," Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang said about the restrictions. "We are exploring limited ways to compete, but Hopper is no longer an option. China's AI moves on with or without US chips." The company's results have been powered by chip investments from some of its Big Tech peers, including Microsoft (MSFT), Amazon (AMZN), and Meta Platforms (META). Here's the latest: Nvidia's (NVDA) first quarter results left much to be desired, but it looks like Wall Street is shaking off the obvious bad news for now, Yahoo Finance's Brian Sozzi reports. Read more here on what Wall Street is saying about Nvidia's quarter. Nvidia's post-earnings call with investors was highly focused on the chipmaker's billions in lost revenue from Trump's ban on its chip exports to China. Nvidia has made specialized chips called H20 — based on the company's prior-generation Hopper AI graphics processing units (GPUs) — for export to China to comply with ever-tightening US export controls. Huang said the company will "see if we can come up with interesting products that could continue to serve the Chinese market" but said "we don't have anything at the moment." The China market accounted for a smaller share of Nvidia's revenue in the first quarter than the prior two periods — 12.5% for the three months that ended on April 27, compared with roughly 14% and 15% in the prior two quarters, respectively. Read more about Nvidia's hit from the Trump administration's new export ban here. Nvidia's earnings call just wrapped up, and the stock remains solidly higher. Shares are up over 4% just after 6 p.m. ET. We have some early reaction to Nvidia's report from one of Wall Street's biggest tech bulls, Wedbush analyst Dan Ives. In a note titled, in part, "The Godfather of AI Delivers Again," Ives called the quarter "very robust" despite clear headwinds from US curbs on its China sales. The report should be "music to the ears of tech bulls listening to this conference call," Ives wrote. Ives also highlighted recent Middle East deals as a growth catalyst despite the China headwinds. "There is one chip in the world fueling the AI Revolution and it's Nvidia. ... That narrative is clear from these results and the positive commentary from Jensen," he said. While Nvidia executives lamented lost revenue from China in the quarter, Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang offered support for President Trump's aim of building manufacturing capacity in the US. "In Houston, we're partnering with Foxconn to construct a million-square-foot factory to build AI supercomputers," he said. "Wistron is building a similar plant in Fort Worth, Texas. To encourage and support these investments, we've made substantial, long-term purchase commitments, a deep investment in America's AI manufacturing future." "Our goal, from chip to supercomputer, built in America within a year." Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang remarked on the Trump administration's ban on a less powerful version of its Hopper chips for China during a call with analysts following its first quarter earnings results: Listen live to the Nvidia earnings call here. The earnings call has begun, and Nvidia CFO Colette Kress noted that Big Tech companies continue to ramp up data center spending. "Major hyperscalers are each deploying nearly ... 72,000 Blackwell GPUs per week, and are on track to clear ramp output this quarter," Kress said. "Microsoft, for example, has already deployed tens of thousands of Blackwell GPUs and is expected to ramp to hundreds of thousands of GB200s with OpenAI as one of its key customers." Listen live to the Nvidia earnings call here Nvidia's (NVDA) latest quarterly earnings — which as a whole topped Wall Street's estimates — showed the company expects to see $8 billion in lost revenue from the Trump administration's ban on sales of its H20 AI chips to China in the second quarter (which ends in late July). That's on top of the $2.5 billion of revenue from the H20 ban the chipmaker said it lost in the first quarter (which ended April 27). That means Nvidia is set to lose $10.5 billion in revenue due to the ban in the first and second quarters of its 2026 fiscal year alone. The Trump administration effectively banned sales of Nvidia's chips to China in early April, weeks before the end of its first quarter. Nvidia's sales to China (including Hong Kong) during the period totaled $5.5 billion, less than the $6.2 billion expected, according to Bloomberg data. That means China accounted for more than 12% of the company's total revenue. Nvidia also said it took a $4.5 billion charge due to a write-down in inventory (chips it produced but now can't sell) in the first quarter due to the new export rules — less than the $5.5 billion hit expected. "We are still evaluating our limited options to supply data center GPU products compliant with the US government's revised export control rules," said CFO Colette Kress. "Losing access to the China AI accelerator market, which we believe will grow to nearly $50 billion, would have a material adverse impact on our business going forward, and benefit our foreign competitors in China and worldwide." Singapore was once again the second-largest market for Nvidia, which gets over half of its revenue (53%) from abroad. Revenue from the region was roughly $9 billion. Notably, Singapore has been a source of chip smuggling to China. Listen live to the Nvidia earnings call here. Hyperscalers, including Microsoft (MSFT), Amazon (AMZN), and Meta Platforms (META), continued to power Nvidia's results. "We saw our Blackwell architecture ramp expand to all customer categories, while large cloud service providers remained our largest at just under 50% of Data Center revenue," the company reported in its quarterly filing. Shares of Nvidia's "Magnificent Seven" Big Tech peers — Apple (AAPL), Alphabet (GOOGL, GOOG), Microsoft (MSFT), Amazon (AMZN), Meta (META), and Tesla (TSLA) — didn't swing significantly after Nvidia's earnings. Other than Nvidia, Tesla led after-hours gains in the tech stock complex, rising 1.3%, while Apple was roughly flat. The others were up less than 1%. Nvidia (NVDA) stock jumped more than 3%, as Wall Street saw strength in the chipmaker's quarter. 'I thought it was a really strong quarter, all things considered,' Benchmark Company managing director Cody Acree told Yahoo Finance (see video below). "Given all the issues with China and all of the concerns about slowing capital budgets, to see the company come in with an $8 billion loss for the Chinese revenue and still come within the marginal range of estimates, I think is a victory," Acree added. Nvidia reported record revenue of $44.1 billion in the first quarter. While that marks a 69% increase over the prior year, it pales in comparison to the 262% revenue growth the AI chip giant reported a year ago. Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang said Wednesday in the company's earnings release: Nvidia's first quarter results on Wednesday came in a bit shy of Wall Street estimates, with adjusted earnings per share and revenue in its data center business falling short of expectations. In the first quarter, Nvidia earned $0.96 per share on an adjusted basis, which excludes charges related to export controls and associated tax implications, with headline revenue coming in at $44.1 billion. Diluted earnings per share came in at $0.81. Wall Street expected the company to report adjusted earnings per share of $0.88 on revenue of $43.3 billion, according to estimates from Bloomberg. A year ago, Nvidia reported adjusted EPS of $0.61 on revenue of $26 billion. Nvidia's data center business — which captures spending on its AI chips — tallied revenue of $39.1 billion, just below the $39.22 billion forecasted by the Street. Shares of the company were up about 3% in extended trading in immediate reaction to the numbers. Nvidia (NVDA) stock has rallied hard in May, gaining 24% in the past month. That leaves many investors wondering if it's a good time to pile into the stock ahead of the chip giant's earnings report. We've pointed out here that Nvidia stock tends to swing 7% in either direction the day after it reports. My colleague Laura Bratton has also noted that Nvidia's earnings often surprise Wall Street. According to tastylive founder and CEO Tom Sosnoff, volatility in the stock is low, even heading into earnings, suggesting that "the expectations are for something rangebound to happen." Sosnoff outlined several key points investors should keep in mind when determining whether to invest in a popular name like Nvidia: Pros: "It's super liquid," Sosnoff said on Wealth. "It's got a very liquid derivatives marketplace. So you can do lots of different strategies and things like that." Sosnoff also pointed out that Nvidia remains a market leader. "It's the bluest of all blue chips right now," he said. Cons: A major con, according to Sosnoff, is that "it's a crowded trade. Nvidia is pretty fully priced." He added that "for the first time, we're not seeing any call skew in there, which means that the derivatives markets, which are pretty good at pricing upside expectations, are kind of mixed right now. They're saying, 'you know what, upside and downside, we have similar expectations.'" "So I think the con is that if Nvidia misses, there's pretty decent pot odds that the downside move could be greater than the upside move if they hit it," he explained. Yahoo Finance's Josh Schafer highlighted one chart that shows how Nvidia became the dominant chipmaker and one of the most valuable companies in the world, with a market capitalization of over $3 trillion: Check out more charts like this that show Nvidia's rise. Yahoo Finance's Laura Bratton reports: Read more here. The countdown to Nvidia's earnings has begun. Beyond the top and bottom line figures, which Wall Street expects to be solid, Yahoo Finance's Brian Sozzi and Brooke Sweeney have compiled three things that investors should watch out for: Read more here. Nvidia stock (NVDA) opened modestly higher ahead of its earnings report but fluctuated in early trading. At last check, shares were down 0.3%. While some volatility is expected, investors will be watching to see how Nvidia trades around earnings — and whether its "Magnificent Seven" tech peers and the broader market move in tandem, as AI is seen as an engine to the growth of the recent bull market. Nvidia's earnings will also create an important benchmark for other AI plays and stocks tied to the technology, such as utilities and companies involved in data center infrastructure. FT reports: Read more here. Reuters reports: Read more here. Nvidia's (NVDA) first quarter results left much to be desired, but it looks like Wall Street is shaking off the obvious bad news for now, Yahoo Finance's Brian Sozzi reports. Read more here on what Wall Street is saying about Nvidia's quarter. Nvidia's post-earnings call with investors was highly focused on the chipmaker's billions in lost revenue from Trump's ban on its chip exports to China. Nvidia has made specialized chips called H20 — based on the company's prior-generation Hopper AI graphics processing units (GPUs) — for export to China to comply with ever-tightening US export controls. Huang said the company will "see if we can come up with interesting products that could continue to serve the Chinese market" but said "we don't have anything at the moment." The China market accounted for a smaller share of Nvidia's revenue in the first quarter than the prior two periods — 12.5% for the three months that ended on April 27, compared with roughly 14% and 15% in the prior two quarters, respectively. Read more about Nvidia's hit from the Trump administration's new export ban here. Nvidia's earnings call just wrapped up, and the stock remains solidly higher. Shares are up over 4% just after 6 p.m. ET. We have some early reaction to Nvidia's report from one of Wall Street's biggest tech bulls, Wedbush analyst Dan Ives. In a note titled, in part, "The Godfather of AI Delivers Again," Ives called the quarter "very robust" despite clear headwinds from US curbs on its China sales. The report should be "music to the ears of tech bulls listening to this conference call," Ives wrote. Ives also highlighted recent Middle East deals as a growth catalyst despite the China headwinds. "There is one chip in the world fueling the AI Revolution and it's Nvidia. ... That narrative is clear from these results and the positive commentary from Jensen," he said. While Nvidia executives lamented lost revenue from China in the quarter, Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang offered support for President Trump's aim of building manufacturing capacity in the US. "In Houston, we're partnering with Foxconn to construct a million-square-foot factory to build AI supercomputers," he said. "Wistron is building a similar plant in Fort Worth, Texas. To encourage and support these investments, we've made substantial, long-term purchase commitments, a deep investment in America's AI manufacturing future." "Our goal, from chip to supercomputer, built in America within a year." Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang remarked on the Trump administration's ban on a less powerful version of its Hopper chips for China during a call with analysts following its first quarter earnings results: Listen live to the Nvidia earnings call here. The earnings call has begun, and Nvidia CFO Colette Kress noted that Big Tech companies continue to ramp up data center spending. "Major hyperscalers are each deploying nearly ... 72,000 Blackwell GPUs per week, and are on track to clear ramp output this quarter," Kress said. "Microsoft, for example, has already deployed tens of thousands of Blackwell GPUs and is expected to ramp to hundreds of thousands of GB200s with OpenAI as one of its key customers." Listen live to the Nvidia earnings call here Nvidia's (NVDA) latest quarterly earnings — which as a whole topped Wall Street's estimates — showed the company expects to see $8 billion in lost revenue from the Trump administration's ban on sales of its H20 AI chips to China in the second quarter (which ends in late July). That's on top of the $2.5 billion of revenue from the H20 ban the chipmaker said it lost in the first quarter (which ended April 27). That means Nvidia is set to lose $10.5 billion in revenue due to the ban in the first and second quarters of its 2026 fiscal year alone. The Trump administration effectively banned sales of Nvidia's chips to China in early April, weeks before the end of its first quarter. Nvidia's sales to China (including Hong Kong) during the period totaled $5.5 billion, less than the $6.2 billion expected, according to Bloomberg data. That means China accounted for more than 12% of the company's total revenue. Nvidia also said it took a $4.5 billion charge due to a write-down in inventory (chips it produced but now can't sell) in the first quarter due to the new export rules — less than the $5.5 billion hit expected. "We are still evaluating our limited options to supply data center GPU products compliant with the US government's revised export control rules," said CFO Colette Kress. "Losing access to the China AI accelerator market, which we believe will grow to nearly $50 billion, would have a material adverse impact on our business going forward, and benefit our foreign competitors in China and worldwide." Singapore was once again the second-largest market for Nvidia, which gets over half of its revenue (53%) from abroad. Revenue from the region was roughly $9 billion. Notably, Singapore has been a source of chip smuggling to China. Listen live to the Nvidia earnings call here. Hyperscalers, including Microsoft (MSFT), Amazon (AMZN), and Meta Platforms (META), continued to power Nvidia's results. "We saw our Blackwell architecture ramp expand to all customer categories, while large cloud service providers remained our largest at just under 50% of Data Center revenue," the company reported in its quarterly filing. Shares of Nvidia's "Magnificent Seven" Big Tech peers — Apple (AAPL), Alphabet (GOOGL, GOOG), Microsoft (MSFT), Amazon (AMZN), Meta (META), and Tesla (TSLA) — didn't swing significantly after Nvidia's earnings. Other than Nvidia, Tesla led after-hours gains in the tech stock complex, rising 1.3%, while Apple was roughly flat. The others were up less than 1%. Nvidia (NVDA) stock jumped more than 3%, as Wall Street saw strength in the chipmaker's quarter. 'I thought it was a really strong quarter, all things considered,' Benchmark Company managing director Cody Acree told Yahoo Finance (see video below). "Given all the issues with China and all of the concerns about slowing capital budgets, to see the company come in with an $8 billion loss for the Chinese revenue and still come within the marginal range of estimates, I think is a victory," Acree added. Nvidia reported record revenue of $44.1 billion in the first quarter. While that marks a 69% increase over the prior year, it pales in comparison to the 262% revenue growth the AI chip giant reported a year ago. Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang said Wednesday in the company's earnings release: Nvidia's first quarter results on Wednesday came in a bit shy of Wall Street estimates, with adjusted earnings per share and revenue in its data center business falling short of expectations. In the first quarter, Nvidia earned $0.96 per share on an adjusted basis, which excludes charges related to export controls and associated tax implications, with headline revenue coming in at $44.1 billion. Diluted earnings per share came in at $0.81. Wall Street expected the company to report adjusted earnings per share of $0.88 on revenue of $43.3 billion, according to estimates from Bloomberg. A year ago, Nvidia reported adjusted EPS of $0.61 on revenue of $26 billion. Nvidia's data center business — which captures spending on its AI chips — tallied revenue of $39.1 billion, just below the $39.22 billion forecasted by the Street. Shares of the company were up about 3% in extended trading in immediate reaction to the numbers. Nvidia (NVDA) stock has rallied hard in May, gaining 24% in the past month. That leaves many investors wondering if it's a good time to pile into the stock ahead of the chip giant's earnings report. We've pointed out here that Nvidia stock tends to swing 7% in either direction the day after it reports. My colleague Laura Bratton has also noted that Nvidia's earnings often surprise Wall Street. According to tastylive founder and CEO Tom Sosnoff, volatility in the stock is low, even heading into earnings, suggesting that "the expectations are for something rangebound to happen." Sosnoff outlined several key points investors should keep in mind when determining whether to invest in a popular name like Nvidia: Pros: "It's super liquid," Sosnoff said on Wealth. "It's got a very liquid derivatives marketplace. So you can do lots of different strategies and things like that." Sosnoff also pointed out that Nvidia remains a market leader. "It's the bluest of all blue chips right now," he said. Cons: A major con, according to Sosnoff, is that "it's a crowded trade. Nvidia is pretty fully priced." He added that "for the first time, we're not seeing any call skew in there, which means that the derivatives markets, which are pretty good at pricing upside expectations, are kind of mixed right now. They're saying, 'you know what, upside and downside, we have similar expectations.'" "So I think the con is that if Nvidia misses, there's pretty decent pot odds that the downside move could be greater than the upside move if they hit it," he explained. Yahoo Finance's Josh Schafer highlighted one chart that shows how Nvidia became the dominant chipmaker and one of the most valuable companies in the world, with a market capitalization of over $3 trillion: Check out more charts like this that show Nvidia's rise. Yahoo Finance's Laura Bratton reports: Read more here. The countdown to Nvidia's earnings has begun. Beyond the top and bottom line figures, which Wall Street expects to be solid, Yahoo Finance's Brian Sozzi and Brooke Sweeney have compiled three things that investors should watch out for: Read more here. Nvidia stock (NVDA) opened modestly higher ahead of its earnings report but fluctuated in early trading. At last check, shares were down 0.3%. While some volatility is expected, investors will be watching to see how Nvidia trades around earnings — and whether its "Magnificent Seven" tech peers and the broader market move in tandem, as AI is seen as an engine to the growth of the recent bull market. Nvidia's earnings will also create an important benchmark for other AI plays and stocks tied to the technology, such as utilities and companies involved in data center infrastructure. FT reports: Read more here. Reuters reports: Read more here. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data
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Nvidia earnings live: Nvidia beats on Q1 revenue, sees $8 billion impact from China export rules
Nvidia (NVDA) has become the poster child for the AI boom that kicked off in late 2022 reported mixed first quarter results after the close on Wednesday. The AI hardware giant reported revenue of $44.1 billion for the quarter, topping analyst estimates of $43.3 billion, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Nvidia reported $26 billion in the same period last year. Adjusted earnings per share, excluding the charge for the H20 chips, were $0.96, beating estimates for $0.93 and surpassing earnings per share of $0.61 last year. Data center revenue fell slightly short of estimates, coming in at $39.1 billion versus $39.2 billion estimated and $22.5 billion last year. The company also called out an $8 billion revenue hit related to China export rules in the second quarter. In an interview last week, Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang said the company had lost $15 billion in sales as a result of these rules. "The $50 billion China market is effectively closed to US industry," Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang said. "The H20 export ban ended our Hopper data center business in China. We cannot reduce Hopper further to comply." "We are exploring limited ways to compete, but Hopper is no longer an option," Huang continued. "China's AI moves on with or without US chips." Nvidia stock popped over 4% in after-hours trading. You can listen to a replay of the earnings call here. The company's results have been powered by chip investments from some of its Big Tech peers, including Microsoft (MSFT), Amazon (AMZN), and Meta Platforms (META). Here's the latest: Nvidia's post-earnings call with investors was highly focused on the chipmaker's billions in lost revenue from Trump's ban on its chip exports to China. Nvidia has made specialized chips called H20 — based on the company's prior-generation Hopper AI graphics processing units (GPUs) — for export to China to comply with ever-tightening US export controls. Huang said the company will "see if we can come up with interesting products that could continue to serve the Chinese market" but said "we don't have anything at the moment." The China market accounted for a smaller share of Nvidia's revenue in the first quarter than the prior two periods — 12.5% for the three months that ended on April 27, compared with roughly 14% and 15% in the prior two quarters, respectively. Read more about Nvidia's hit from the Trump administration's new export ban here. Nvidia's earnings call just wrapped up, and the stock remains solidly higher. Shares are up over 4% just after 6 p.m. ET. We have some early reaction to Nvidia's report from one of Wall Street's biggest tech bulls, Wedbush analyst Dan Ives. In a note titled, in part, "The Godfather of AI Delivers Again," Ives called the quarter "very robust" despite clear headwinds from US curbs on its China sales. The report should be "music to the ears of tech bulls listening to this conference call," Ives wrote. Ives also highlighted recent Middle East deals as a growth catalyst despite the China headwinds. "There is one chip in the world fueling the AI Revolution and it's Nvidia. ... That narrative is clear from these results and the positive commentary from Jensen," he said. While Nvidia executives lamented lost revenue from China in the quarter, Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang offered support for President Trump's aim of building manufacturing capacity in the US. "In Houston, we're partnering with Foxconn to construct a million-square-foot factory to build AI supercomputers," he said. "Wistron is building a similar plant in Fort Worth, Texas. To encourage and support these investments, we've made substantial, long-term purchase commitments, a deep investment in America's AI manufacturing future." "Our goal, from chip to supercomputer, built in America within a year." Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang remarked on the Trump administration's ban on a less powerful version of its Hopper chips for China during a call with analysts following its first quarter earnings results: Listen live to the Nvidia earnings call here. The earnings call has begun, and Nvidia CFO Colette Kress noted that Big Tech companies continue to ramp up data center spending. "Major hyperscalers are each deploying nearly ... 72,000 Blackwell GPUs per week, and are on track to clear ramp output this quarter," Kress said. "Microsoft, for example, has already deployed tens of thousands of Blackwell GPUs and is expected to ramp to hundreds of thousands of GB200s with OpenAI as one of its key customers." Listen live to the Nvidia earnings call here Nvidia's (NVDA) latest quarterly earnings — which as a whole topped Wall Street's estimates — showed the company expects to see $8 billion in lost revenue from the Trump administration's ban on sales of its H20 AI chips to China in the second quarter (which ends in late July). That's on top of the $2.5 billion of revenue from the H20 ban the chipmaker said it lost in the first quarter (which ended April 27). That means Nvidia is set to lose $10.5 billion in revenue due to the ban in the first and second quarters of its 2026 fiscal year alone. The Trump administration effectively banned sales of Nvidia's chips to China in early April, weeks before the end of its first quarter. Nvidia's sales to China (including Hong Kong) during the period totaled $5.5 billion, less than the $6.2 billion expected, according to Bloomberg data. That means China accounted for more than 12% of the company's total revenue. Nvidia also said it took a $4.5 billion charge due to a write-down in inventory (chips it produced but now can't sell) in the first quarter due to the new export rules — less than the $5.5 billion hit expected. "We are still evaluating our limited options to supply data center GPU products compliant with the US government's revised export control rules," said CFO Colette Kress. "Losing access to the China AI accelerator market, which we believe will grow to nearly $50 billion, would have a material adverse impact on our business going forward, and benefit our foreign competitors in China and worldwide." Singapore was once again the second-largest market for Nvidia, which gets over half of its revenue (53%) from abroad. Revenue from the region was roughly $9 billion. Notably, Singapore has been a source of chip smuggling to China. Listen live to the Nvidia earnings call here. Hyperscalers, including Microsoft (MSFT), Amazon (AMZN), and Meta Platforms (META), continued to power Nvidia's results. "We saw our Blackwell architecture ramp expand to all customer categories, while large cloud service providers remained our largest at just under 50% of Data Center revenue," the company reported in its quarterly filing. Shares of Nvidia's "Magnificent Seven" Big Tech peers — Apple (AAPL), Alphabet (GOOGL, GOOG), Microsoft (MSFT), Amazon (AMZN), Meta (META), and Tesla (TSLA) — didn't swing significantly after Nvidia's earnings. Other than Nvidia, Tesla led after-hours gains in the tech stock complex, rising 1.3%, while Apple was roughly flat. The others were up less than 1%. Nvidia (NVDA) stock jumped more than 3%, as Wall Street saw strength in the chipmaker's quarter. 'I thought it was a really strong quarter, all things considered,' Benchmark Company managing director Cody Acree told Yahoo Finance (see video below). "Given all the issues with China and all of the concerns about slowing capital budgets, to see the company come in with an $8 billion loss for the Chinese revenue and still come within the marginal range of estimates, I think is a victory," Acree added. Nvidia reported record revenue of $44.1 billion in the first quarter. While that marks a 69% increase over the prior year, it pales in comparison to the 262% revenue growth the AI chip giant reported a year ago. Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang said Wednesday in the company's earnings release: Nvidia's first quarter results on Wednesday came in a bit shy of Wall Street estimates, with adjusted earnings per share and revenue in its data center business falling short of expectations. In the first quarter, Nvidia earned $0.96 per share on an adjusted basis, which excludes charges related to export controls and associated tax implications, with headline revenue coming in at $44.1 billion. Diluted earnings per share came in at $0.81. Wall Street expected the company to report adjusted earnings per share of $0.88 on revenue of $43.3 billion, according to estimates from Bloomberg. A year ago, Nvidia reported adjusted EPS of $0.61 on revenue of $26 billion. Nvidia's data center business — which captures spending on its AI chips — tallied revenue of $39.1 billion, just below the $39.22 billion forecasted by the Street. Shares of the company were up about 3% in extended trading in immediate reaction to the numbers. Nvidia (NVDA) stock has rallied hard in May, gaining 24% in the past month. That leaves many investors wondering if it's a good time to pile into the stock ahead of the chip giant's earnings report. We've pointed out here that Nvidia stock tends to swing 7% in either direction the day after it reports. My colleague Laura Bratton has also noted that Nvidia's earnings often surprise Wall Street. According to tastylive founder and CEO Tom Sosnoff, volatility in the stock is low, even heading into earnings, suggesting that "the expectations are for something rangebound to happen." Sosnoff outlined several key points investors should keep in mind when determining whether to invest in a popular name like Nvidia: Pros: "It's super liquid," Sosnoff said on Wealth. "It's got a very liquid derivatives marketplace. So you can do lots of different strategies and things like that." Sosnoff also pointed out that Nvidia remains a market leader. "It's the bluest of all blue chips right now," he said. Cons: A major con, according to Sosnoff, is that "it's a crowded trade. Nvidia is pretty fully priced." He added that "for the first time, we're not seeing any call skew in there, which means that the derivatives markets, which are pretty good at pricing upside expectations, are kind of mixed right now. They're saying, 'you know what, upside and downside, we have similar expectations.'" "So I think the con is that if Nvidia misses, there's pretty decent pot odds that the downside move could be greater than the upside move if they hit it," he explained. Yahoo Finance's Josh Schafer highlighted one chart that shows how Nvidia became the dominant chipmaker and one of the most valuable companies in the world, with a market capitalization of over $3 trillion: Check out more charts like this that show Nvidia's rise. Yahoo Finance's Laura Bratton reports: Read more here. The countdown to Nvidia's earnings has begun. Beyond the top and bottom line figures, which Wall Street expects to be solid, Yahoo Finance's Brian Sozzi and Brooke Sweeney have compiled three things that investors should watch out for: Read more here. Nvidia stock (NVDA) opened modestly higher ahead of its earnings report but fluctuated in early trading. At last check, shares were down 0.3%. While some volatility is expected, investors will be watching to see how Nvidia trades around earnings — and whether its "Magnificent Seven" tech peers and the broader market move in tandem, as AI is seen as an engine to the growth of the recent bull market. Nvidia's earnings will also create an important benchmark for other AI plays and stocks tied to the technology, such as utilities and companies involved in data center infrastructure. FT reports: Read more here. Reuters reports: Read more here. It's pretty commonplace to see any chart that has to do with Nvidia's (NVDA) business over the past several years looking like a hockey stick. From a more than 700% growth in the company's market and share price since the launch of ChatGPT in late November 2022, the charts are eye-catching. But in our Chart of the Day today, we wanted to highlight how the growth of Nvidia's actual products is just as astonishing. The AI chip leader uses a metric called "AI FLOPS," which stands for floating-point calculations per second. The company provided Yahoo Finance's Laura Bratton with a breakdown of how many FLOPS each of its GPUs over the past several years has been able to hit. Hopper, first launched in 2022, maxed out at 2,958 FLOPs. Nvidia's new Blackwell chip hits about 20,000 FLOPS. You don't have to understand the granular parts of AI computing, or even what FLOPS means, to see this chart and comprehend why Nvidia is winning the AI race by a landslide right now. The productivity of the product they're selling to end users has skyrocketed just like their stock price. Nvidia's post-earnings call with investors was highly focused on the chipmaker's billions in lost revenue from Trump's ban on its chip exports to China. Nvidia has made specialized chips called H20 — based on the company's prior-generation Hopper AI graphics processing units (GPUs) — for export to China to comply with ever-tightening US export controls. Huang said the company will "see if we can come up with interesting products that could continue to serve the Chinese market" but said "we don't have anything at the moment." The China market accounted for a smaller share of Nvidia's revenue in the first quarter than the prior two periods — 12.5% for the three months that ended on April 27, compared with roughly 14% and 15% in the prior two quarters, respectively. Read more about Nvidia's hit from the Trump administration's new export ban here. Nvidia's earnings call just wrapped up, and the stock remains solidly higher. Shares are up over 4% just after 6 p.m. ET. We have some early reaction to Nvidia's report from one of Wall Street's biggest tech bulls, Wedbush analyst Dan Ives. In a note titled, in part, "The Godfather of AI Delivers Again," Ives called the quarter "very robust" despite clear headwinds from US curbs on its China sales. The report should be "music to the ears of tech bulls listening to this conference call," Ives wrote. Ives also highlighted recent Middle East deals as a growth catalyst despite the China headwinds. "There is one chip in the world fueling the AI Revolution and it's Nvidia. ... That narrative is clear from these results and the positive commentary from Jensen," he said. While Nvidia executives lamented lost revenue from China in the quarter, Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang offered support for President Trump's aim of building manufacturing capacity in the US. "In Houston, we're partnering with Foxconn to construct a million-square-foot factory to build AI supercomputers," he said. "Wistron is building a similar plant in Fort Worth, Texas. To encourage and support these investments, we've made substantial, long-term purchase commitments, a deep investment in America's AI manufacturing future." "Our goal, from chip to supercomputer, built in America within a year." Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang remarked on the Trump administration's ban on a less powerful version of its Hopper chips for China during a call with analysts following its first quarter earnings results: Listen live to the Nvidia earnings call here. The earnings call has begun, and Nvidia CFO Colette Kress noted that Big Tech companies continue to ramp up data center spending. "Major hyperscalers are each deploying nearly ... 72,000 Blackwell GPUs per week, and are on track to clear ramp output this quarter," Kress said. "Microsoft, for example, has already deployed tens of thousands of Blackwell GPUs and is expected to ramp to hundreds of thousands of GB200s with OpenAI as one of its key customers." Listen live to the Nvidia earnings call here Nvidia's (NVDA) latest quarterly earnings — which as a whole topped Wall Street's estimates — showed the company expects to see $8 billion in lost revenue from the Trump administration's ban on sales of its H20 AI chips to China in the second quarter (which ends in late July). That's on top of the $2.5 billion of revenue from the H20 ban the chipmaker said it lost in the first quarter (which ended April 27). That means Nvidia is set to lose $10.5 billion in revenue due to the ban in the first and second quarters of its 2026 fiscal year alone. The Trump administration effectively banned sales of Nvidia's chips to China in early April, weeks before the end of its first quarter. Nvidia's sales to China (including Hong Kong) during the period totaled $5.5 billion, less than the $6.2 billion expected, according to Bloomberg data. That means China accounted for more than 12% of the company's total revenue. Nvidia also said it took a $4.5 billion charge due to a write-down in inventory (chips it produced but now can't sell) in the first quarter due to the new export rules — less than the $5.5 billion hit expected. "We are still evaluating our limited options to supply data center GPU products compliant with the US government's revised export control rules," said CFO Colette Kress. "Losing access to the China AI accelerator market, which we believe will grow to nearly $50 billion, would have a material adverse impact on our business going forward, and benefit our foreign competitors in China and worldwide." Singapore was once again the second-largest market for Nvidia, which gets over half of its revenue (53%) from abroad. Revenue from the region was roughly $9 billion. Notably, Singapore has been a source of chip smuggling to China. Listen live to the Nvidia earnings call here. Hyperscalers, including Microsoft (MSFT), Amazon (AMZN), and Meta Platforms (META), continued to power Nvidia's results. "We saw our Blackwell architecture ramp expand to all customer categories, while large cloud service providers remained our largest at just under 50% of Data Center revenue," the company reported in its quarterly filing. Shares of Nvidia's "Magnificent Seven" Big Tech peers — Apple (AAPL), Alphabet (GOOGL, GOOG), Microsoft (MSFT), Amazon (AMZN), Meta (META), and Tesla (TSLA) — didn't swing significantly after Nvidia's earnings. Other than Nvidia, Tesla led after-hours gains in the tech stock complex, rising 1.3%, while Apple was roughly flat. The others were up less than 1%. Nvidia (NVDA) stock jumped more than 3%, as Wall Street saw strength in the chipmaker's quarter. 'I thought it was a really strong quarter, all things considered,' Benchmark Company managing director Cody Acree told Yahoo Finance (see video below). "Given all the issues with China and all of the concerns about slowing capital budgets, to see the company come in with an $8 billion loss for the Chinese revenue and still come within the marginal range of estimates, I think is a victory," Acree added. Nvidia reported record revenue of $44.1 billion in the first quarter. While that marks a 69% increase over the prior year, it pales in comparison to the 262% revenue growth the AI chip giant reported a year ago. Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang said Wednesday in the company's earnings release: Nvidia's first quarter results on Wednesday came in a bit shy of Wall Street estimates, with adjusted earnings per share and revenue in its data center business falling short of expectations. In the first quarter, Nvidia earned $0.96 per share on an adjusted basis, which excludes charges related to export controls and associated tax implications, with headline revenue coming in at $44.1 billion. Diluted earnings per share came in at $0.81. Wall Street expected the company to report adjusted earnings per share of $0.88 on revenue of $43.3 billion, according to estimates from Bloomberg. A year ago, Nvidia reported adjusted EPS of $0.61 on revenue of $26 billion. Nvidia's data center business — which captures spending on its AI chips — tallied revenue of $39.1 billion, just below the $39.22 billion forecasted by the Street. Shares of the company were up about 3% in extended trading in immediate reaction to the numbers. Nvidia (NVDA) stock has rallied hard in May, gaining 24% in the past month. That leaves many investors wondering if it's a good time to pile into the stock ahead of the chip giant's earnings report. We've pointed out here that Nvidia stock tends to swing 7% in either direction the day after it reports. My colleague Laura Bratton has also noted that Nvidia's earnings often surprise Wall Street. According to tastylive founder and CEO Tom Sosnoff, volatility in the stock is low, even heading into earnings, suggesting that "the expectations are for something rangebound to happen." Sosnoff outlined several key points investors should keep in mind when determining whether to invest in a popular name like Nvidia: Pros: "It's super liquid," Sosnoff said on Wealth. "It's got a very liquid derivatives marketplace. So you can do lots of different strategies and things like that." Sosnoff also pointed out that Nvidia remains a market leader. "It's the bluest of all blue chips right now," he said. Cons: A major con, according to Sosnoff, is that "it's a crowded trade. Nvidia is pretty fully priced." He added that "for the first time, we're not seeing any call skew in there, which means that the derivatives markets, which are pretty good at pricing upside expectations, are kind of mixed right now. They're saying, 'you know what, upside and downside, we have similar expectations.'" "So I think the con is that if Nvidia misses, there's pretty decent pot odds that the downside move could be greater than the upside move if they hit it," he explained. Yahoo Finance's Josh Schafer highlighted one chart that shows how Nvidia became the dominant chipmaker and one of the most valuable companies in the world, with a market capitalization of over $3 trillion: Check out more charts like this that show Nvidia's rise. Yahoo Finance's Laura Bratton reports: Read more here. The countdown to Nvidia's earnings has begun. Beyond the top and bottom line figures, which Wall Street expects to be solid, Yahoo Finance's Brian Sozzi and Brooke Sweeney have compiled three things that investors should watch out for: Read more here. Nvidia stock (NVDA) opened modestly higher ahead of its earnings report but fluctuated in early trading. At last check, shares were down 0.3%. While some volatility is expected, investors will be watching to see how Nvidia trades around earnings — and whether its "Magnificent Seven" tech peers and the broader market move in tandem, as AI is seen as an engine to the growth of the recent bull market. Nvidia's earnings will also create an important benchmark for other AI plays and stocks tied to the technology, such as utilities and companies involved in data center infrastructure. FT reports: Read more here. Reuters reports: Read more here. It's pretty commonplace to see any chart that has to do with Nvidia's (NVDA) business over the past several years looking like a hockey stick. From a more than 700% growth in the company's market and share price since the launch of ChatGPT in late November 2022, the charts are eye-catching. But in our Chart of the Day today, we wanted to highlight how the growth of Nvidia's actual products is just as astonishing. The AI chip leader uses a metric called "AI FLOPS," which stands for floating-point calculations per second. The company provided Yahoo Finance's Laura Bratton with a breakdown of how many FLOPS each of its GPUs over the past several years has been able to hit. Hopper, first launched in 2022, maxed out at 2,958 FLOPs. Nvidia's new Blackwell chip hits about 20,000 FLOPS. You don't have to understand the granular parts of AI computing, or even what FLOPS means, to see this chart and comprehend why Nvidia is winning the AI race by a landslide right now. The productivity of the product they're selling to end users has skyrocketed just like their stock price.