Nvidia Earnings Preview: Can Jensen Lift the Market?

Spiders
05-27

Nvidia (NVDA) is set to report earnings on May 28, and the entire market is watching closely. With AI hype still running strong and Nvidia positioned as the undisputed leader in the tech space, the company's performance could significantly sway investor sentiment—not just in tech, but across the broader market.

Expectations and Estimates

For Q1, Nvidia is expected to slightly exceed the already forecast of $43 billion in revenue. Q2 revenue is projected to be flat or see modest growth, with market consensus around $44.6 billion. While this might sound uninspiring, many bulls are eyeing Q3 for a potential reacceleration. Key catalysts include:

  • GB300 shipments

  • The potential delivery of an enhanced Blackwell variant to China, which could open up incremental revenue streams despite regulatory hurdles.

Valuation Concerns and Market Position

Personally, I’m staying on the sidelines for now. Nvidia’s share price feels too high, and the valuation seems stretched by almost any traditional metric. NVDA currently trades at around $135.2, up roughly 3% today, and hovering closer to the top end of its 52-week range ($86.62 to $153.13) and it raises red flags for me.

NVIDIA (NVDA)

While the company’s fundamentals remain strong, much of the future growth story appears priced in. High expectations mean the stock could stumble—even if Nvidia beats on earnings—if forward guidance doesn’t blow the market away.

Is It Priced for Perfection?

Another reason for my caution: Nvidia’s meteoric rise over the past few years. The company has gone from a gaming GPU leader to the de facto AI infrastructure backbone. It’s an incredible transformation—but much of that narrative is now widely known. I’m concerned about "priced-for-perfection" risk, where even stellar results might not be enough to justify current levels.

Moreover, as someone who prefers value-oriented investing, I find it difficult to justify entering a position here, especially ahead of earnings. The fear of missing out (FOMO) is real, but I’d rather look for underappreciated or undervalued opportunities elsewhere, where the risk/reward balance is more favorable.

Final Thoughts

Nvidia may still surprise and continue its upward trajectory—especially if it delivers another blockbuster quarter and provides upbeat guidance. But with investor sentiment already sky-high, the margin for error is razor-thin. For now, I’m opting for caution over euphoria.

Waiting Game: Nvidia at Highs, Add at $170 or Wait $150?
Nvidia’s Q2 revenue rose over 55%, but revenue in China dropped sharply by 24%, wiping out $93B in market value. After the last earnings report, Nvidia pulled back and consolidated before breaking to new highs, eventually climbing to $180. This time, the earnings aren’t actually bad — the recent surge just front-loaded the gains. 1. Is $170 the start of Nvidia’s new bull market, or should we wait for a pullback to the $150 support level? 2. What’s your choice — is it ever too late to buy Nvidia? 3. How will AVGO affect Nvidia stock price?
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