A record-breaking quarter of earnings and revenue growth backed by impressive guidance might as well justify why NVIDIA Corporation (NASDAQ:NVDA) is trading near all-time highs. The gaming and graphics pioneer has been firing on all angles going by the impressive quarterly results.
Growth Momentum
The stock has more than doubled in value over the past year on investors reacting to a string of developments that affirm underlying growth. Growth opportunities around cryptocurrency mining and autonomous vehicles are factors that continue to draw investors into the stock. The company is also well-positioned to play a big role in cloud gaming, another development that has got the market excited.
Similarly, Nvidia has strengthened its competitive edge in the graphics card business, which explains its 80% market share. Strong demand exceeding supply all but affirms the fact that the chipmaker could be in for another record-breaking year.
Record-Breaking Quarter
Backed by solid underlying fundamentals, Nvidia capped yet another record-breaking year of revenues and earnings growth. For the first time, Nvidia surpassed the $5 billion mark in sales on revenues jumping 61% to $5 billion, helped by a strong holiday gaming chip demand and renewed interest in cryptocurrency mining.
Gaming sales were up 67% to a record high of $2.5 billion as the company posted record full-year revenue of $16.68 billion, compared to $10.92 billion reported a year earlier. Likewise, the company posted a 53% jump in net income that came in at $950 million or $1.53 a share.
The better-than-expected results came on Nvidia experiencing strong demand for its GPUs currently in use in powering video games, cloud gaming, and data centers. The A100 universal AI data center GPUs ramping strongly across cloud service providers also helped fuel revenue growth. Likewise, the company is also benefiting from companies worldwide applying its AI to create cloud-connected products.
Buoyed by the strong momentum, management expects the company to post revenues of between $5.19 billion and $5.41 billion for the current quarter, well above analysts’ estimates of $4.49 billion