The Magnificent Seven member's looming quarterly results could be a key moment for the broader market.
Nvidia (NVDA -4.05%) may be the most-watched stock on the planet these days. Though it's already climbed a mind-boggling 800% over the past two years, many investors and analysts think the stock still has plenty of room to run.
Nvidia's upcoming earnings report is crucial, with analysts expecting EPS of $0.85 on $38.15 billion revenue, amid high expectations for its AI GPU segment. Berkshire Hathaway reported a 27% full-year operating earnings jump, with a record $334.2 billion cash pile.
Artificial intelligence (AI) titan Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA) has had a turbulent start to 2025, with its stock entering a pivotal week ahead of the company's fourth-quarter earnings report.
Zoom, Home Depot, TJX, and many more also report earnings. Plus, data on housing prices and consumer confidence.
This upcoming week will have plenty of earnings to watch, including the king of the market: Nvidia (NVDA). Jenny Horne discusses the news flow surrounding the A.I. giant heading into its report, as well as those of Salesforce (CRM) and Home Depot (HD). Rick Ducat highlights the bearish and bullish trends for all three companies.
Tech stocks are currently in high demand, and despite market volatility, Nvidia (NASDAQ:NVDA) and Meta Platforms (NASDAQ:META) remain industry leaders.
Nvidia's profit “could have enough substance even if less sizzle,” BofA analysts say.
Nvidia is expected to report a 72.1% revenue growth, but anything less than a significant beat and raise will disappoint investors. Historically, Nvidia has consistently beaten revenue estimates by $2 billion and raised guidance by $4-$5 billion, creating high market expectations. High implied volatility suggests Nvidia's stock could swing 9% post-results, with significant resistance at $140 and $150, making a substantial rise challenging.
The DeepSeek dip is nearly over for Nvidia (NVDA -4.05%). I'm referring, of course, to the thrashing Nvidia's share price took last month when many investors panicked about the threat presented by Chinese artificial intelligence (AI) company DeepSeek.
Calpers slashed stakes in Nvidia, Super Micro, and AT&T, and increased an investment in Rivian in the fourth quarter.
Following the end of each quarter, institutional investors managing over $100 million are required to file a form 13F with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). A 13F itemizes the individual stocks money managers bought and sold during the most recent quarter.