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Nvidia shares fell greater than 5 percent Thursday afternoon because the chipmaker's latest earnings report failed to satisfy Wall Street's high expectations, though revenue greater than doubled within the last quarter.
The declines resulted in a greater than $150 billion loss within the Silicon Valley-based company's stock market value, which had soared amid a spending boom in artificial intelligence.
Nvidia shares are still up nearly 150 percent because the starting of 2024.
In its latest results on Wednesday, the chipmaker said it expects third-quarter sales of $32.5 billion, up 2 percent, just above analysts' consensus expectations.
However, the number upset investors who’re used to the chipmaker far outperforming Wall Street forecasts within the two years since ChatGPT launched.
For the three months ended July 28, revenue was $30 billion, up 122 percent from a yr ago and above analysts' forecasts of $28.7 billion.
“The revenue overperformance in comparison with expectations was the smallest in six quarters, so it's not the type of massive success that Nvidia has often reported,” said Henry Allen, macro strategist at Deutsche Bank.
On Wednesday, Nvidia tried to reassure investors that, despite production problems, the corporate will generate “multi-billion dollar sales” in the present fiscal yr with the following generation of its powerful AI chips.
Chief Executive Jensen Huang told the Financial Times that delays in developing the next-generation AI processor wouldn’t affect the chipmaker's plans to launch a new edition of its flagship product yearly.
Bank of America analyst Vivek Arya called Thursday's price movements “quarterly noise” and said Nvidia continues to represent “unique growth at a really reasonable valuation.”
According to Mohit Kumar, strategist at Jefferies, some analysts imagine that the chip manufacturer's earnings at the moment are as essential to the US financial markets because the US Federal Reserve's monetary policy decisions. The reason for that is the corporate's role as an “indicator” for the whole technology industry.