Nvidia Corporation is reiterated as a Strong Buy with a $404/share price target, reflecting robust AI-driven revenue growth and hyperscaler demand. NVDA's leadership in data center chips remains unchallenged, with hyperscalers ramping up capital budgets for AI compute capacity through 2026. Geopolitical risks, such as the GAIN AI Act and U.S.-China trade tensions, could impact international sales, but domestic demand is expected to offset losses.
Jensen Huang, founder and CEO of NVIDIA ( NVDA ), is a leader of global industrial policy in a way the world has never seen before.
What is the primary risk in the AI surge that nearly no one is factoring in?
Upgrading Nvidia to Strong Buy as Q3 FY26 $57B revenue (+62% yoy, record $10B sequential jump) and $65B Q4 guide show strong AI demand at just 38x forward earnings. B300 is now 2/3 of Blackwell revenue, which is a tailwind to both the top line and gross margins, and the Rubin was confirmed for H2 2026. The company has $500B Blackwell/Rubin visibility into 2025 and 2026, which is a strong sign that the AI buildout is far from over.
The artificial-intelligence trade was already starting to crack before Nvidia Corp. reported earnings, and upbeat results from the world's largest company weren't enough to flip sentiment.
Nvidia remains the dominant force as the primary AI infrastructure beneficiary, posting stellar Q3 results and raising guidance above Wall Street expectations. Yet, the market was surprisingly disappointed. NVDA's full ecosystem advantage, expanding into networking and software, cements its moat despite market concerns over AI circular financing and valuation. The AI infrastructure buildout, projected to reach $3-4 trillion by 2030, positions NVDA well to raise its free cash flow margins to almost 50% by FY2028.
Our experts' takes on what really drove the mid-week sell-off. Was it all much ado about nothing?
Including Nvidia, the Mag 7 group's Q3 earnings increased +28.3% from the same period last year on +18.1% higher revenues. Notably, expectations for Q4 have been rising as of late.
The stock market is in limbo. It could be there for a while.
NVIDIA's soaring data center demand, record Q3 results and upbeat Q4 outlook amplify the case for NVDA as AI momentum accelerates.
The Trump administration is considering whether to permit Nvidia Corp (NASDAQ:NVDA, XETRA:NVD) to sell its H200 artificial intelligence chips to China, according to people familiar with the discussions. The move would mark a notable shift in US export policy as relations between Washington and Beijing show signs of improvement.
AI companies are spending so much on infrastructure that Nvidia's data center business now brings in nearly $50 billion. But is this sustainable growth or just the latest tech mania?