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Ouster Stock Jumps as NVIDIA Tie-Up Tests the Line Between Real Demand and Rich Valuation
13 May 2026
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Ouster Stock Jumps as NVIDIA Tie-Up Tests the Line Between Real Demand and Rich Valuation

San Francisco, May 13, 2026, 01:06 PDT

  • Ouster climbed to almost $28.75 before the bell, up 6.1% from Tuesday’s $27.10 finish. The bump came after its Rev8 lidar sensors secured qualification for NVIDIA’s DRIVE Hyperion platform.
  • This isn’t really about quick revenue. What NVIDIA gets here is prime sensor placement—its autonomous-driving stack brings vetted sensors right in front of automakers, robotaxi outfits, and developers working on Level 4 systems.
  • Bulls highlight Rev8, Stereolabs, and the company’s record product revenue as signals that Ouster is morphing into a larger “physical AI” player. Bears, though, flag ongoing losses, dilution concerns, and the valuation following a steep rally.

Ouster shares climbed ahead of Wednesday’s bell, buoyed by news that its latest Rev8 OS digital lidar sensors secured qualification for NVIDIA DRIVE Hyperion—a move investors read as opening new doors for the company in autonomous vehicles. The stock ended Tuesday up 1.1% at $27.10, after trading in a range from $24.76 to $28.55. In early premarket action, it was quoted at $28.75, up 6.1% from Tuesday’s finish.

The price action was simple enough—though a big financial win isn’t a sure thing yet. Lidar, which stands for light detection and ranging, builds a 3D map by firing out laser pulses. Ouster is betting that its Rev8 model stands out by adding native color, giving systems access to both depth info and a visual layer. By securing qualification for NVIDIA DRIVE Hyperion, Rev8 cleared NVIDIA’s sensor-compatibility bar and can now plug data directly into the DriveWorks stack. That lowers the hassle for autonomous-vehicle engineers working off of NVIDIA’s standard toolkit.

This isn’t a purchase order—important distinction. In the lidar world, though, where drawn-out design timelines and tough qualification requirements have dashed plenty of early bets, being part of a heavyweight compute-and-sensor platform shifts the odds for investors thinking about what comes next. NVIDIA pitches DRIVE Hyperion as ready for production at Level 4 autonomy, meaning the car can handle itself—no human input needed—within set parameters. Aeva and Hesai are already in the sensor lineup, so Ouster isn’t breaking new ground here, but the company now has a more straightforward case: Rev8 fits squarely among these top picks.

The announcement follows a stretch of heavy activity for the stock. Ouster posted first-quarter revenue at $49 million, rising 49% year-on-year, with product revenue coming in at $48 million, a jump of 55%. Over 12,600 lidar and camera sensors shipped out the door—lidar accounted for roughly 65% of that volume. Gross margin stood at 43%, edging up from last year’s 41%. The number, however, dropped from the previous quarter, which saw a one-time royalty bump.

The earnings picture split the crowd. Ouster reported a net loss of $17.5 million, along with an adjusted EBITDA loss of $7 million—adjusted EBITDA strips out interest, taxes, depreciation, amortization and a few other items. For the second quarter, management set revenue guidance between $49.5 million and $52.5 million, a modest increase from Q1 that factors in a full quarter from Stereolabs.

The call had management sounding more upbeat than understated. CEO Angus Pacala touted Ouster’s 13 consecutive quarters of product revenue growth and described Rev8 as the “world’s first native color lidar.” CFO Ken Gianella laid out the numbers: $175 million in cash, restricted cash, and short-term investments, with zero debt. He flagged 2027 as the expected window for Ouster to really “hit its profitability stride”—still just a goal for now, not something in the books yet. StockAnalysis

Bulls argue Ouster is evolving beyond sensors, aiming for a full-stack platform—lidar, cameras, AI compute, plus software and data tools. Oppenheimer bumped its price target up to $42 from $40, maintaining an Outperform. The firm pointed to Rev8 and the L4 chip family as real catalysts, expecting those to boost sales as customers come on board. That lines up with how the market’s trading it: investors are paying up for a shot at Rev8 turning into a platform, not just another product on the shelf.

Here’s the bear angle, and it circles back to the same chart. When a stock runs up this quickly, even positive headlines can look pricey. Cantor Fitzgerald cut its rating to Neutral from Overweight, keeping a $33 price target, and pointed to valuation concerns. Ouster, meanwhile, put in place an at-the-market program to sell as much as $100 million in common shares over time. That sort of setup lets the company tap the market as it sees fit—potentially handy, but it does risk diluting current shareholders.

This isn’t a hypothetical—dilution is a real threat for lidar players. Scale is non-negotiable, and getting there burns cash. Luminar is the cautionary tale: its shares were suspended by Nasdaq in December 2025, with delisting set for January 2026. The company’s wind-down, later linked to Chapter 11 and asset sales, sent a clear signal. Ouster’s balance sheet looks healthier by comparison, but investors still want to see signed, recurring orders from every platform deal before they’ll keep backing it.

Right now, investors are buying into the NVIDIA story—Ouster looks more appealing as it finds a way into autonomous-driving systems, especially with robotaxis, industrial automation, and smart infrastructure all zeroing in on similar sensing needs across separate sectors. The bigger challenge is coming up fast: backlog, margin stability, and whether Rev8 adoption can actually drive revenue growth without triggering another round of mounting losses.

Khadija Saeed is a financial markets reporter at TS2.tech, specializing in stocks, technology and emerging industries. She studied economics and finance at the London School of Economics and previously worked in market research before moving into financial journalism. Her coverage focuses on the companies, innovations and economic trends influencing global investors.

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