“GPU售罄”:英伟达业绩和预测大幅超出预期,股价飙升
"GPUs Are Sold Out": Nvidia Soars After Blowing Away Results, Projections

原始链接: https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/gpus-are-sold-out-nvidia-soars-after-blowing-away-results-projections

## Nvidia 第三季度财报摘要 英伟达第三季度业绩大幅超出预期,主要得益于其数据中心业务的爆炸式增长。营收达到 570.1 亿美元(同比增长 62%),超出预期超过 20 亿美元,其中数据中心营收高达 512 亿美元——环比增长 100 亿美元。虽然游戏和汽车业务营收略低于预期,但其影响被数据中心业绩所掩盖。 调整后每股收益为 1.30 美元,超过了 1.24 美元的预测。然而,毛利率略有下降至 73.6%,这归因于新芯片和系统推出的成本,但随着 Blackwell 的量产,预计将有所改善。 英伟达的展望非常乐观,预计第四季度营收为 650 亿美元(正负 2%),远高于预期的 619.8 亿美元,并预测毛利率将得到改善。该公司强调了对云 GPU 的需求激增以及人工智能生态系统的加速发展。 尽管近期股价下跌,但积极的业绩推动盘后交易上涨 4% 以上,并带动了其他人工智能相关股票。英伟达拥有 606 亿美元的现金,已做好充分准备,可以利用不断扩张的人工智能市场并保持其主导地位。

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原文

In our preview of NVDA's Q3 results, we said that "it's not a question whether the company beats - they always do - but whether the "blowout" and the "smash" will be big enough to impress a market that has already priced in perfection, and beyond, for the GPU maker."

The market was impressed.

Here is what NVDA just reported for Q3: 

  • Adjusted EPS $1.30, beating estimates of $1.24
  • Revenue $57.01 billion, up +62% y/y, beating estimate $55.19 billion, and up $3BN vs guidance
    • Data center revenue $51.2 billion, +66% y/y, beating estimate $49.34 billion
    • Gaming revenue $4.3 billion, +30% y/y, missing estimate $4.42 billion
    • Professional Visualization revenue $760 million, +56% y/y, beating estimate $612.8 million
    • Automotive revenue $592 million, +32% y/y, missing estimate $620.9 million
  • Adjusted operating income $37.75 billion, +62% y/y, estimate $36.46 billion
  • Adjusted operating expenses $4.22 billion, +38% y/y, estimate $4.22 billion
    • Adjusted gross margin 73.6%, missing est 74.0% and down from 75.0% a year ago. 
  • R&D expenses $4.71 billion, +39% y/y, estimate $4.66 billion
  • Free cash flow $22.09 billion, +32% y/y

And visually, the stunning fact here is that Data Center rose $10BN sequentially, and up 66% YoY.

Naturally, since NVidia's revenue is hyperscalar capex, the company has a "little" revenue concentration risk. For Q3, four direct customers with sales greater than 10% of total revenue included: 

  • Customer A at 22% 
  • Customer B at 15% 
  • Customer C at 13% 
  • Customer D at 11%

While there were some blemishes across the various segments, most notably gaming and automotive revenue which missed, these are negligible for the company considering its Data Centers revenue was a whopping $51.2BN, up 66% YoY, and smashing estimates of $49.3BN by nearly $2BN.

Going down the income statement, the one item that jumps out as not being significantly better than estimates was gross margin. Nvidia said it’s rolling out new chips and new systems and that’s pushing up the company’s costs compared with a year ago. That said, as the ramp of Blackwell picks up sequentially, so are its margins. More importantly, the company's guidance (see below) should ease concerns here.

And if historicals were impressive, the outlook was even more blowout:

  • Revenue is expected to be $65.0 billion, plus or minus 2% (i.e. $63.70 billion to $66.30 billion) , smashing expectations of $61.98BN (although there were some buyside bogeys as high as $75BN which means that Huang is likely sandbagging again).
  • Gross margins (GAAP and non-GAAP) are expected to be 74.8% and 75.0%, respectively, plus or minus 50 basis points.
  • Operating expenses (GAAP and non-GAAP) are expected to be approximately $6.7 billion and $5.0 billion, respectively.

Commenting on the quarter, CEO Jensen Huang said that “Blackwell sales are off the charts, and cloud GPUs are sold out. Compute demand keeps accelerating and compounding across training and inference — each growing exponentially. We’ve entered the virtuous cycle of AI. The AI ecosystem is scaling fast — with more new foundation model makers, more AI startups, across more industries, and in more countries. AI is going everywhere, doing everything, all at once.”

Kunjan Sobhani, a senior technology analyst at Bloomberg Intelligence, also chimes in: "With a broadening AI infrastructure build-out and improving supply alignment, clarity on the $500 billion pipeline through fiscal 2027, large-scale expansion deals and competitive options will be key for sustaining sentiment"

While normally nobody looks at Nvidia’s balance sheet, maybe it's time to start, as it is only getting stronger. NVDA ended the quarter with $60.6 billion of cash and equivalents, so "only" $320BN away from Berkshire. So it still has plenty of room to fund the adoption of AI in new parts of the economy, as it’s indicated it will.

Investors’ initial reaction to Nvidia’s results -- including a big beat on its 4Q revenue guidance -- is good. Shares spiked more than 4% in postmarket trading.

This is important, because the fate of Nvidia’s stock determines the the AI trade, and the broader market: Nvidia holds the largest weighting in the S&P 500 Index - hangs heavily on how investors digest the results and commentary from the company.

Yet while Nvidia shares are sharply higher, the move reverses only part of a slump that saw the stock slip about 10% below a record high set at the end of October. 

In any case, Nvidia’s results are strong enough to also lift shares of other stocks tied to artificial intelligence in after-hours trading: shares of CoreWeave and Nebius are up 4%, AMD is up nearly 2%, Micron is up about 2% and Broadcom shares are moving higher as well.  

Goldman's James Schneider has just pushed out his first take: "Strong quarter with upside to guidance should provide relief for the stock." We excerpt the highlights from the note below (full report available to pro subs).

  • Key stock takeaways: We expect the stock to trade higher following a stronger quarter and guidance relative to the Street, and against relatively balanced expectations heading into the quarter. We believe investor expectations had been somewhat elevated heading into the quarter, given upward CapEx revisions from hyperscalers, as well as Nvidia's own bullish 2026 outlook at GTC in late October. However, we believe the bar for stock performance has been lowered somewhat, with the stock pulling back ~6% ahead of the print. On the conference call, we expect investors to focus on : (1) incremental details on the company's recent $500 bn Datacenter revenue forecast; (2) visibility into OpenAI deployments; (3) the timing of the Rubin product launch in 2026.

In short: Nvidia just saved the possibility of a Christmas rally.

More in the full Goldman note available to pro subs.

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