NEW YORK, May 20, 2026, 05:07 EDT
Nvidia heads into Wednesday’s earnings with options traders pricing a 6.5% move, which means about $355 billion in potential market value shifting. That’s sizable risk. Matt Amberson at ORATS said investors are “complacent about AI/capex.” Chris Murphy at Susquehanna said traders are focusing more on “upside participation.” Reuters
Nvidia is set to post Q1 fiscal 2027 results after the close Wednesday. The chipmaker’s conference call starts at 2 p.m. PT, or 5 p.m. ET. The quarter finished April 26. Nvidia said it plans to publish CFO comments soon after the numbers drop.
Nvidia shares closed at $220.61 on Tuesday, off 0.77%. Market cap stands close to $5.4 trillion. According to Trading Economics, Nvidia is up 64% in the past year, keeping its results in focus for the market.
Nvidia is expected to report quarterly revenue of $78.5 billion, according to Visible Alpha consensus data cited by S&P Global Market Intelligence. Estimates put data-center revenue, which includes Nvidia’s AI server chips and networking gear, at $72.8 billion. Investors are focused on the Blackwell AI platform and watching for news on the upcoming Rubin platform, the preview said.
Nvidia faces tougher competition. Reuters reported the chipmaker is seeing more pressure in AI inference, as rivals work to chip away at its lead. AMD, Intel, and Alphabet’s tensor processing units are all looking to win share. “The issue is whether Nvidia’s ecosystem is as dominant moving forward,” John Belton, portfolio manager at Gabelli Funds, told Reuters. Reuters
Demand continues. Microsoft and Meta are leading cloud players driving AI infrastructure spending, with Reuters saying Big Tech could pour more than $700 billion into AI this year. But such heavy spending also raises the bar for Nvidia when it comes to guidance—especially on data-center growth, profit, and supply.
Nvidia’s fiscal Q4 2026 numbers landed well for bulls. Revenue hit $68.13 billion, a 73% jump from a year ago. CEO Jensen Huang said customers are “racing to invest in AI compute.” But the focus Wednesday isn’t just on chip sales. The street is watching if AI infrastructure spend can keep going higher. NVIDIA Newsroom
Bulls aren’t backing off yet. Last week, Reuters columnist Jamie McGeever pointed out that UBS, Morgan Stanley, and Bank of America all raised their Nvidia price targets. Bank of America set its target at $320, 44% over Monday’s close. Still, McGeever noted Nvidia shares dropped in the days after its last three earnings beats.
Big numbers might not move stocks if the market doesn’t want risk. Higher bond yields tend to cool demand for growth names. Nvidia’s main clients are piling on debt to keep AI money flowing. Ameriprise chief market strategist Anthony Saglimbene said sticky yields and inflation could “challenge what investors are willing to pay” even if fundamentals hold up. Slower data center spending, pricier memory or packaging, or more trouble with China chip sales could turn a beat into a sell-the-news drop.
Nvidia’s trade looks simple but has its challenges. The company has to show that Blackwell demand is steady, Rubin is coming without crunching margins, and rivals aren’t erasing the edge investors count on. Just clearing estimates may not be enough.