Nvidia stock rises after slight beat driven by A.I. chips
Nvidia has increasingly been seen by investors as one of the chip stocks best positioned to endure an economic slowdown that hurts PC and semiconductor sales.
Nvidia Corp CEO Jensen Huang holds one of the company's new RTX 4090 chips for computer gaming in this undated handout photo provided September 20, 2022.
Nvidia Corp | via Reuters
Nvidia stock rose more than 8% in extended trading Wednesday after the company reported slightly higher revenue and net income for its fiscal fourth quarter than Wall Street expected, despite a year-over-year decrease in both categories. Here's how the chipmaker did versus Refinitiv consensus expectations for the quarter ended in January:
EPS: 88 cents, adjusted, versus expectations of 81 centsRevenue: $6.05 billion, versus expectations of $6.00 billionNvidia reported 57 cents in net income per share. Nvidia forecast $6.5 billion in sales in its first quarter, higher than the $6.33 billion expected by Wall Street.
Although both revenue and earnings were down from last year's $1.32 per share and $7.64 billion in sales, Nvidia has increasingly been seen by investors as one of the chip stocks best positioned to endure an economic slowdown that hurts PC and semiconductor sales.
Nvidia's data center business, which includes chips for AI, continued to grow, suggested that it could continue to benefit heavily from artificial intelligence software like ChatGPT and Microsoft Bing's AI chatbot. Nvidia's graphics processors are well suited to train and run machine learning software.
The stock was up about 45% in 2023 before Wednesday's earnings report.
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang said on a call with analysts that AI is at an "inflection point," pushing businesses of all sizes to buy Nvidia chips to develop machine learning software.
"Generative AI's versatility and capability has triggered a sense of urgency at enterprises around the world to develop and deploy AI strategies," Huang said.
Most of Nvidia's sales of GPUs for artificial intelligence fall into the company's data center category. Data center revenue increased 11% on an annual basis to $3.62 billion. The company said the growth was because U.S. cloud service providers bought more products.
Gaming revenue was down, as expected, as sales were highly elevated in the past few years. The Covid pandemic encouraged gamers to upgrade their systems with new graphics cards from companies like Nvidia, but sales significantly slowed in the past year.
Specifically, Nvidia reported $1.83 billion in fourth-quarter gaming revenue, a 46% drop from the same time last year. The company said the decline was because it was selling fewer chips to partners because they currently have too much stock.
Nvidia also said that it shipped fewer chips for game consoles during the quarter, which is reported inside the gaming category. Nintendo uses a Nvidia chip to power the Switch.
Other categories, such as professional visualization and automotive chips, remain much smaller than the company's gaming and data center businesses. Nvidia's professional visualization business for designers reported $226 million in revenue, down 65% annually, and automotive revenue was $294 million, up 135% from last year.