A binary code is displayed on a laptop screen in the background, while the Nvidia logo is showcased on a phone on April 28, 2024.
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Nvidia shares fell on about 6% Thursday, as the company’s fiscal second-quarter gross margin dipped slightly, and its revenue beat was eclipsed by a backdrop of increasingly lofty expectations.
Nvidia reported July quarter revenue on Wednesday of more than $30 billion, up 122% year on year.
It was the fourth straight quarter of triple-digit revenue growth. But as Nvidia continues its rapid expansion, the annual comparisons are getting tougher.
Nvidia issued market-beating revenue guidance for its fiscal third quarter of $32.5 billion. That would imply an 80% year-on-year increase, but a slowdown from the July quarter.
Meanwhile, the company said that gross margins would be in the “mid-70% range” for the full year. Analysts were expecting a full-year margin of 76.4%, according to StreetAccount.
However, analysts said that Nvidia would have had to beat all expectations by a long way in order to see a pop in the stock after the numbers.
The pullback in the stock on Thursday also comes after a meteoric rally, with Nvidia’s shares rising more than 150% this year to date. The stock has picked up more than 750% since the start of 2023, as one of the biggest beneficiaries of the artificial intelligence boom. Large technology companies have been ramping up investment and buying Nvidia’s graphics processing units to train large AI models.
The current fall in Nvidia’s stock price also weighed on shares of semiconductor firms around the world, with big names including memory maker Samsung and chip manufacturer Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. lower on Thursday.
Nvidia addressed another concern during its earnings call — the reported delays to its next-generation Blackwell AI chip.
“In the fourth quarter, we expect to ship several billion dollars in Blackwell revenue,” Nvidia Chief Financial Officer Colette Kress said on a call with analysts.
The company also announced a $50 billion stock buyback program.
— CNBC’s Kif Leswing contributed to this report.