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Nvidia’s stock rises after $78 billion earnings forecast

Nvidia’s stock rises after $78 billion earnings forecast

101 finance101 finance2026/02/25 22:39
By:101 finance

Nvidia’s latest quarterly report arrived the way those do now: as a global group project, graded in public, by an audience that has already decided what an A looks like. So the company walked into the room and tried to out-A the A.

For months, the market’s relationship with Nvidia has looked like a never-ending treadmill sprint: The quarter has to be enormous, the guide has to be bigger, and the commentary has to sound inevitable while still somehow offering something new. On Wednesday, Nvidia delivered a record quarter and then, more importantly, handed Wall Street a forward number that had some jaws dropping.

For Q4 FY26, Nvidia posted record revenue of $68.1 billion, up 20% from the prior quarter and 73% from a year earlier, with GAAP diluted EPS of $1.76. The engine room stayed the engine room: Data Center revenue hit $62.3 billion, up 22% sequentially and 75% year over year.

Nvidia shares initially rose about 3% in after-hours trading, a move that suggested relief more than shock — the kind of response you get when the company clears the bar and then the bar starts getting raised again. It beat the quarter, it beat the forward quarter harder, and it managed to do both while keeping margins pinned near the number investors have treated as a proxy for pricing power.

The market, predictably, cared most about the part that hasn’t happened yet. Nvidia told investors it expects $78 billion in revenue for the current quarter (plus or minus 2%) — a number that landed above what Wall Street had been modeling: revenue expected at $66.16 billion and first-quarter revenue expected at $72.46 billion. That’s a couple of billion above the quarter’s baseline and more than five billion above the Street’s plain-vanilla next-quarter expectation — the kind of gap that turns “beat and raise” into “reset the math.”

Nvidia’s AI boom has matured into something that looks a lot like industrial logistics. The company is shipping more than just chips; it’s shipping systems. And the supporting cast (networking, interconnects, full-stack integration) is starting to show up in the numbers with a little pep in its step. In the quarter, networking revenue was nearly $11 billion, up 34% sequentially and 263% year over year, with Nvidia pointing to the ramp of its NVLink compute fabric for GB200 and GB300 systems alongside Ethernet and InfiniBand growth.

Margins — the other religion — held up. Nvidia reported GAAP gross margin of 75% for the quarter (non-GAAP 75.2%), up sequentially as Blackwell ramped and inventory provisions eased. But the full-year picture is messier: FY 2026 GAAP gross margin was 71.1%, down from 75% in fiscal 2025, a reminder that scaling a hardware transition at this size tends to come with some financial scuff marks.

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Disclaimer: The content of this article solely reflects the author's opinion and does not represent the platform in any capacity. This article is not intended to serve as a reference for making investment decisions.

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