Nvidia shares fell 3% in morning trading after beating Wall Street expectations in its fiscal third-quarter results. Despite the positive performance, concerns arose about a projected negative impact in the next quarter due to export restrictions affecting sales to China and other countries.
Finance chief Colette Kress stated, "We expect sales to these destinations to decline significantly in Q4 2024, offset by strong growth elsewhere." Nvidia is actively pursuing U.S. government licenses for sales in China and developing data center products to align with government policies.
Financially, Nvidia reported earnings of $4.02 per share and revenue of $18.12 billion, surpassing estimates. Year-over-year, revenue surged by 206%, reaching $9.24 billion in net income.
Nvidia's data center revenue stood out at $14.51 billion, up 279%, and gaming contributed $2.86 billion, an 81% increase. Looking forward, the company anticipates $20 billion in revenue for the fiscal fourth quarter, implying a remarkable 231% growth.
Despite challenges, including competition from AMD and export restrictions in China, analysts remain optimistic, attributing Nvidia's success to high GPU demand, especially in generative AI capabilities. Nvidia's stock has surged 241% this year, significantly outperforming the S&P 500's 18% increase over the same period.