Nvidia’s Biggest Quarter Ever — and the Market Shrugged. Now What?

Record revenue. Record net income. CEO Jensen Huang calling Blackwell sales “off the charts.” And the stock drifted lower.

That’s the Nvidia paradox right now — and it’s worth sitting with rather than dismissing.

On May 20, Nvidia reported Q1 FY2027 earnings: $81.6 billion in revenue, an 85% year-over-year increase that cleared Wall Street’s $78.8B estimate by a meaningful margin. Adjusted EPS came in at $1.87 versus the $1.76 consensus. Net income hit $58.3 billion. These are not modest beats. These are historically large numbers from a single company in a single quarter.

And yet, shares opened slightly higher before fading. The reflexive read is “sell the news.” The more useful read is about where the bar has been set.

The Valuation Problem

Nvidia’s market cap has crossed $5.2 trillion, cementing it as the world’s most valuable company. At roughly 30x forward earnings, the stock already prices in extraordinary execution over multiple years. When you trade at that multiple, a modest beat doesn’t move the needle — and anything short of a dramatic upside surprise becomes an excuse for institutional profit-taking.

Hedge funds that loaded up ahead of earnings took profits. Systematic strategies trimmed on volatility expansion. The result was a counterintuitive decline on what was, objectively, one of the strongest earnings reports in corporate history.

What the Numbers Actually Say

  • Q1 FY2027 Revenue: $81.62B (+85% YoY)
  • Data Center Revenue: $39.1B (+69% YoY)
  • Data Center as % of total revenue: ~87%
  • Full fiscal 2026 data center revenue estimate: $170–190B
  • Next quarter consensus estimate (Q2 FY2027): $93.2B revenue, $2.12 EPS

Blackwell B200 and GB200 hardware remains sold out through mid-2026. The CUDA software ecosystem continues to generate switching costs that keep competitors at arm’s length. And Nvidia has now telegraphed a $200 billion standalone CPU market it intends to pursue — diversifying beyond GPUs in a way the market hasn’t fully priced.

Analyst Targets

  • Consensus (61 analysts, S&P Global): $295.34 average target — ~37% upside
  • ChartMill consensus (71 analysts): $271.60 mean target
  • Highest target on Street: $500
  • Rating: Strong Buy across the board

The part people skip: upward EPS revisions for next quarter have accelerated by over 10% in the past three months. Analysts aren’t backing off. They’re raising numbers even as the stock consolidates.

The Honest Debate

Bulls point to demand visibility extending well into 2026, CUDA’s moat, and an addressable market that keeps expanding as agentic AI workloads multiply. Bears — and they’re a small minority — argue the valuation requires flawless, multi-year execution with no stumbles from custom ASICs, geopolitical export restrictions, or a deceleration in hyperscaler capex.

Both sides have legitimate ground. The difference is time horizon. At 30x forward earnings, you’re paying for a lot of future that hasn’t happened yet. That’s not necessarily wrong — it just requires conviction most investors don’t model carefully enough.

Next quarterly report is expected in August. Between now and then, the tape on agentic AI adoption, Blackwell ramp updates, and any shift in hyperscaler CapEx commentary will be the real price driver — not what already happened in Q1.

The earnings were extraordinary. The question was never whether they were good enough. The question is whether the business three years from now justifies the price today. That’s where the argument lives.

For informational purposes only.