Nvidia's Post-Earnings Bump Might Not Last. Here's Why

Market-leading chipmaker Nvidia, Inc ( $NVIDIA(NVDA)$ ) walked up to its first quarter (Q1) earnings for its Fiscal Year (FY) 2026 on the 28th of May with a warning that its total revenues will be taking a hit after the U.S. administration continued with a largely-bipartisan effort enacted over the course of the past five years to restrict sales of advanced technology to China by including its "China-specific" H20 chips with immediate effect.

In the fortnight leading up to the Q1 2026 earnings release, the company's stock essentially held steady around the $124 level attained on the 14th of May.

Traded volumes shrunk back from the highs seen in early April after President Trump's "Liberation Day" tariffs were announced and followed by tightening controls on technology sales to China. Given the rise seen, traded volumes could be considered cautiously bullish. 

By reporting revenue of $44.1 billion for Q1 2026 versus Bloomberg-compiled analyst estimates of $43.3 billion and delivering adjusted earnings per share (EPS) of $0.96 (excluding the "charge" from the loss of H20 chip sales to China) versus an estimate of $0.93, the company is adjudged by analysts as having passed muster.

However, the bottom line is definitely taking a hit in trends. 

Trend Drilldown

Note: As of at the time of writing, the company hasn't furnished the more-detailed 10K statement submitted to the SEC. Thus, the trend doesn't have some of the detail presented in the previous article about Nvidia's Q4 2025 earnings.

As per the company, a little over 10% of its revenue in Q1 2026 – $4.6 billion – was from H20 sales to China before the export restrictions kicked in and caused a nearly equivalent charge of $4.5 billion. 

Nonetheless, early revenue trends seem encouraging – at least at first blush. 

If trends were to continue, the company would have realized a 36% growth in revenue in FY 2026, which is a third of what was achieved in the previous FY. Meanwhile, cost of revenue is already trending to be 112% higher for FY 2026, which is somewhat consistent with what was witnessed in the previous FY. CFO Collette Kress' commentary states that this is due to higher compensation expenses (which would likely be reflected in the Stock-Based Compensation figures that are currently not available) as well development costs for new products (which would have been reflected in R&D costs, also not currently available). 

Net Income per share is currently trending to close FY 2026 with a paltry 4% growth, which is a mighty fall from the triple-digit percentage growth seen over the past two FYs. 

The company's "Compute and Network" segment continues to grow on the back of datacentre demand. 

Graphics cards – once its mainstay that endeared the company's products among gamers all over the world – remains on a decline. Also, the "OEM and Other" revenue category – which encompasses robotics, embedded systems, and AI-powered products for industrial automation – registered a 12% quarter-on-quarter decrease. If this trend continues, the company is essentially set to be mostly (if not nearly wholly) dependent on datacentre demand for its cash flows. 

The language of the earnings call heavily emphasized its new achievements on datacentres: the company's Blackwell platform was reported to have set records in AI-driven inference results by delivering up to 30 times higher throughput and Blackwell cloud instances are now reported as being available on Amazon's ( $Amazon.com(AMZN)$) AWS, Alphabet's Google Cloud, Microsoft's ( $Microsoft(MSFT)$) Azure and Oracle's Cloud Infrastructure. Also announced were a host of initiatives to build AI factories in Saudi Arabia and infrastructure clusters in Abu Dhabi, plans to work on an AI factory supercomputer in collaboration with Foxconn and the Government of Taiwan, as well as a research center in Japan. 

In Conclusion

The company estimates that Q2 2026 revenue will effectively run par with Q1's at $45 billion. Considering the fact that this excludes sales to China, this represents a net 10% increase in global demand, ex-China. In terms of top line trends, this is a net positive despite not being quite as dramatic as those witnessed in prior quarters. Gross margins, on the other hand, shot up 10% to 71% after the loss of China business and raw material obligations piled up. As the company recognizes a further $8 billion in Q2 over the loss of business, this means that the 71% margin will continue to weigh down earnings. 

CEO Jensen Huang stated that the $50 billion China market is effectively closed to US industry as a whole and that the company is currently exploring limited ways to compete in it. However, given the highly-focused nature of export restrictions, Nvidia likely won't be able to compete in it for a while.

A lot of the valuation premium that Nvidia's stock exhibited in price ratio terms over its peers in the semiconductor industry came from its massive top- and bottom-line growth as it made inroads in datacenters all around the world (including China). With bottom-line trends likely affected with new product rollouts, inventory reordering and relatively stable demand from the rest of the world, a correction in the valuation premium to the tune of 10-15% is quite likely over the course of Q2 earnings. Management actions, for one, seem to bear out the notion that Nvidia’s high valuations are transient: as per Rule 10b5-1 plans filed with the SEC, CEO Jensen Huang sold 6 million shares in 2025 for $713 million and plans to sell another 6 million in 2026 for $800 million by present-day valuations. Similarly, CFO Colette Kress sold 500,000 shares in 2025 for $61.7 million and is set to sell another 500,000. For the first time, Nvidia director Brooke Seawell has filed a plan to sell 1.15 million shares valued at $155 million.

Regardless of CEO Huang's statements, the company isn't massively affected at least in the present by the loss of the China market. However, the forward growth outlook in the ticker is a different matter: as growth softens, the sky-high valuation will be tested and perhaps found wanting. There will likely be tactical trading opportunities galore on both the upside as well as the downside for the next three months (if not further). Growth-oriented investors, on the other hand, might have to make do with overall single-digit percentage growth for the duration of FY 2026. 

Professional investors with access to European bourses might do well to consider leveraged ETPs to capitalize on the stock’s inevitable turbulence going forward. The +3x Long NVIDIA ETP ( $LS 3X NVIDIA(NVD3.UK)$ offers magnified return during the upsides of the stock’s trajectory while the -3X Short NVIDIA ETP ( $LS -3X SHORT NVIDIA (NVDA) ETP(NV3S.UK)$) does the same during the downside.

Both products have generated solid market-beating profits in limited durations over the past three months alone.

Also worthy of consideration is the NVIDIA Options ETP (LSE ticker: NVDI), which seeks to generate monthly income by buying NVIDIA shares, selling up to 5% ‘out-of-the-money’ (OTM) weekly call options on NVIDIA and paying a return on the premia collected. Currently, its distribution yield is a solid 60.05%.

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For broader articles that deep-dives into business and culture in Asia, visit asianomics.substack.com. The latest articles describes the fullness of the rationale behind my recent commentary about markets, Tesla and rare earth elements that appeared on FXStreet, Reuters and S&P Global Intelligence.

# Waiting Game: Nvidia at Highs, Add at $170 or Wait $150?

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  • High risk here
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