Nvidia earnings clear lofty hurdle set by analysts amid fears about an
AI bubble
[November 20, 2025] By
MICHAEL LIEDTKE
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Nvidia’s sales of the computing chips powering the
artificial intelligence craze surged beyond the lofty bar set by stock
market analysts in a performance that may ease recent jitters about a
Big Tech boom turning into a bust that topples the world’s most valuable
company.
The results announced late Wednesday provided a pulse check on the
frenzied spending on AI technology that has been fueling both the stock
market and much of the overall economy since OpenAI released its ChatGPT
three years ago.
Nvidia has been by far the biggest beneficiary of the run-up because its
processors have become indispensable for building the AI factories that
are needed to enable what’s supposed to be the most dramatic shift in
technology since Apple released the iPhone in 2007.
But in the past few weeks, there has been a rising tide of sentiment
that the high expectations for AI may have become far too frothy,
setting the stage for a jarring comedown that could be just as dramatic
as the ascent that transformed Nvidia from a company worth less than
$400 billion three years ago to one worth $4.5 trillion at the end of
Wednesday's trading.
Nvidia’s report for its fiscal third quarter covering the August-October
period elicited a sigh of relief among those fretting about a worst-case
scenario and could help reverse the recent downturn in the stock market.
“The market should belt out a heavy sigh, given the skittishness we have
been experiencing,” said Sean O’Hara, president of the investment firm
Pacer ETFs.
The company's stock price gained more than 5% in Wednesday's extended
trading after the numbers came out. If the shares trade similarly
Thursday, it could result in a one-day gain of about $230 billion in
stockholder wealth.

Nvidia earned $31.9 billion, or $1.30 per share, a 65% increase from the
same time last year, while revenue climbed 62% to $57 billion. Analysts
polled by FactSet Research had forecast earnings of $1.26 per share on
revenue of $54.9 billion. What's more, the Santa Clara, California,
company predicted its revenue for the current quarter covering
November-January will come in at about $65 billion, nearly $3 billion
above analysts' projections, in an indication that demand for its AI
chips remains feverish.
The incoming orders for Nvidia's top-of-the-line Blackwell chip are “off
the charts,” Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang said in a prepared statement that
described the current market conditions as “a virtuous cycle.” In a
conference call, Nvidia Chief Financial Officer Collette Kress said that
by the end of next year the company will have sold about $500 billion in
chips designed for AI factories within a 24-month span Kress also
predicts trillions of dollars more will be spent by the end of the
2020s.
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Visitors give commands to robots at Nvidia's booth during the China
International Supply Chain Expo at the China International
Exhibition Center in Beijing, China, July 18, 2025. (AP Photo/Mahesh
Kumar A., File)
 In a conference call preamble that
has become like a State of the AI Market address, Huang seized the
moment to push back against the skeptics who doubt his thesis that
technology is at tipping point that will transform the world.
“There’s been a lot of talk about an AI bubble. From our vantage
point, we see something very different," Huang insisted while
celebrating “depth and breadth” of Nvidia's growth.
The upbeat results, optimistic commentary and ensuring reaction
reflects the pivotal role that Nvidia is playing in the future
direction of the economy — a position that Huang has leveraged to
forge close ties with President Donald Trump, even as the White
House wages a trade war that has inhibited the company's ability to
sell its chips in China's fertile market.
Trump is increasingly counting on the tech sector and the
development of artificial intelligence to deliver on his economic
agenda. For all of Trump’s claims that his tariffs are generating
new investments, much of that foreign capital is going to data
centers for AI’s computing demands or the power facilities needed to
run those data centers.
“Saying this is the most important stock in the world is an
understatement,” Jay Woods, chief market strategist of investment
bank Freedom Capital Markets, said of Nvidia.
The boom has been a boon for more than just Nvidia, which became the
first company to eclipse a market value of $5 trillion a few weeks
ago, before the recent bubble worries resulted in a more than 10%
decline. As OpenAI and other Big Tech powerhouses snap up Nvidia's
chips to build their AI factories and invest in other services
connected to the technology, their fortunes have also been soaring.
Apple, Microsoft, Google parent Alphabet Inc. and Amazon all boast
market values in the $2 trillion to $4 trillion range.
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