Nvidia (NVDA -3.38%) has been one of the stock market's biggest winners over the past few years, thanks to its strength in one game-changing area: artificial intelligence (AI). The company is the world's No.
Nvidia Corporation delivered outstanding FQ2 2026 results, smashing revenue and EPS estimates despite already high expectations, highlighting its operational strength. Data Center revenue increased 56% year-over-year to $41.1 billion, driven by Blackwell's, but fell short of expectations. Despite stellar results, I see signs of moderating earnings growth, suggesting future stock performance may face some headwinds.
NVIDIA, Meta and Amazon emerge as top picks under Driehaus' momentum strategy, spotlighting strong earnings trends and growth potential.
Nvidia Corporation delivered another stellar quarter, beating top and bottom-line estimates with strong growth across Data Center, Gaming, and Automotive segments. Concerns about China are overblown; NVDA management signals H20 shipments could resume in Q3, and other growth levers like sovereign AI remain robust. Valuation models project a 35% upside, driven by momentum, innovation, and diversified growth beyond just AI, supporting a new price target of $236.
Nvidia joins Google in backing nuclear-fusion startup Commonwealth Fusion Systems.
NVIDIA's (NVDA) Q2 beat was marred by a data center revenue miss and likely margin pressure in the long term, but ETFs like SMH and SHOC could help investors play the broad-based strength in the AI arena.
Nvidia, AMD, CoreWeave, Vertiv, and other stocks were all falling sharply Friday.
Nvidia reported another massive quarter this week with $46.7 billion in revenue, a 56% year-over-year increase driven almost entirely by AI demand. But despite CEO Jensen Huang's bold prediction of $3 to 4 trillion in global AI infrastructure spending in the next five years, the stock slid as investors questioned how long this kind of growth can last.
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'Mad Money' host Jim Cramer talks today's record market action and how to navigate this bull run.
Nvidia (NVDA) has a China issue. Resolving it, its CEO says, could have bigger implications for America's AI competitiveness.
Nvidia stock fell 3.2% Wednesday after reporting record sales, falling short on data-center revenue, and predicting cooler growth, according to the Wall Street Journal.