Just two customers drove 39% of chipmaker Nvidia's second-quarter revenue, TechCrunch reported Saturday (Aug. 30), citing a securities filing. The filing came in the wake of Nvidia's earnings report last week, in which the firm, the most valuable company in the world, logged record revenue of $46.
Key Points Despite Nvidia‘s (NVDA) Q2 revenue of $46.7 billion, up 56% year-over-year, and strong Q3 guidance of $54 billion, the market sold off NVDA stock.
Broadcom (NASDAQ: AVGO) has emerged as one of the challengers to Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA in the race for artificial intelligence (AI) dominance. However, both semiconductor giants have delivered solid returns in recent months.
If Nvidia's numbers are correct, then OpenAI is planning hundreds of billions worth of spending.
Nvidia remains a Buy due to its dominant AI infrastructure position, strong growth, and impressive profitability, despite a demanding valuation. Recent earnings beat expectations, with $46.7B in revenue and 56% data center growth, confirming robust AI demand and execution. Risks include high valuation, rising inventory, geopolitical tensions, and intensifying competition, making buying on dips ($155–165) the best strategy.
Investors have rushed to buy Nvidia (NVDA -3.38%) stock during the artificial intelligence (AI) boom, driving the stock up a mind-boggling 1,200% over the past five years. Why are investors so excited about this one particular company?
Sarah Kunst calls Nvidia's (NVDA) earnings "solid," noting strong growth despite multiple headwinds tackling the A.I. behemoth. Even as Nvidia seeks to grow into an A.I.
Nvidia (NVDA -3.38%) continued its breakneck growth in its second quarter (ended July 27), as demand for its graphics processing units (GPUs) remains voracious. The strong growth came despite the company not selling any chips to Chinese-based customers during the quarter.
Nearly 40% of Nvidia's second quarter revenue came from just two customers, according to a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission.
NVIDIA (NASDAQ: NVDA) has the largest market cap in the world, at $4.25 trillion.
Key Points in This Article: Market disappointment stems from lost China sales and slowing data center growth has led to a 4% drop in Nvidia‘s (NVDA) stock.
The chip maker announced a $60 billion stock buyback this week — and sparked a debate about whether the move makes sense.