NVIDIA Hits $81.6B, Guides $91B – Stock Slips on the News

NVIDIA delivered the largest single-quarter revenue print in tech history on May 20, 2026 — $81.6 billion, up 85% from a year ago — and guided next quarter to $91 billion. The stock, which had ripped higher into the print alongside the rest of the semiconductor complex, slipped about 1.3% in after-hours trading. That is a textbook case of buy-the-rumor, sell-the-fact.

The headline numbers

NVIDIA’s first quarter of fiscal 2027 — the three months ended April 26, 2026 — broke records across the board, per the company’s official press release. Total revenue of $81.6 billion was up 20% sequentially and up 85% year-over-year. Data Center revenue alone — the engine that has powered the entire AI equity trade since 2023 — hit $75.2 billion, up 92% year-over-year.

Earnings per share came in at $2.39 on a GAAP diluted basis and $1.87 non-GAAP, on non-GAAP net income of $45.5 billion. Gross margin printed at 74.9% GAAP and 75.0% non-GAAP — effectively a software-company margin, even as NVIDIA sells some of the most capital-intensive silicon on Earth.

For Q2 FY27, NVIDIA guided revenue to $91.0 billion plus or minus 2%, implying another roughly 12% sequential step-up on top of the 20% sequential jump just delivered. Q2 non-GAAP gross margin guidance held at 75.0%.

Segment Q1 FY27 Revenue YoY Growth
Data Center — Compute $60.4B +77%
Data Center — Networking $14.8B +199%
Data Center — Total $75.2B +92%
Gaming, Pro Viz, Auto, OEM & Other (implied) ~$6.4B
Total Revenue $81.6B +85%
Source: NVIDIA Q1 FY2027 press release, May 20, 2026. Quarter ended April 26, 2026.

Data Center did almost all of it

Within Data Center, the surprise was not compute — it was networking. Compute revenue of $60.4 billion grew 77% year-over-year, slightly slower than the 92% blended segment growth. Networking — Spectrum-X Ethernet, NVLink switches, and Quantum-X InfiniBand — printed $14.8 billion, up 199% year-over-year, per NVIDIA’s segment disclosure.

That ratio tells you customers are not just buying GPUs anymore. They are buying entire data-center fabrics — the silicon, the switches, the high-speed interconnects, and the software stack that ties them together. The competitive moat now spans the full rack, not just the chip inside it.

Why the stock fell anyway

Three forces were working against the print before the numbers even crossed the tape.

The run-up. Chip stocks ripped higher into the print earlier this week — Intel +6%, AMD +8%, ARM +16% — pricing in a strong NVIDIA quarter. By the time the closing bell rang on May 20, NVDA itself was at $223.47, up 1.30% on the day. With the bar already that high, a beat alone was never going to be enough; the company needed to blow consensus apart on guidance.

The law of large numbers. A 12% sequential guide on top of an $81.6 billion base is, in absolute dollars, an extraordinary expansion. Emotionally, though, it reads as “only” 12% to investors who watched NVIDIA print 30–50% sequential jumps through 2023 and 2024. The Q1 print itself decelerated from the prior 88% YoY pace to 85% — small, but the first soft data point in two years.

Valuation and concentration. NVIDIA’s market capitalization sits above $5 trillion, making it one of the largest weights in the S&P 500. The marginal buyer at that scale needs to be confident not just that NVIDIA wins AI, but that AI capex itself keeps compounding for years. Any narrative crack — H200 sales to China, custom-silicon competition from hyperscalers, a pause in cloud capex — can shake the price even when the print is clean.

NVIDIA Quarterly Revenue: Q1 FY26 actual, Q1 FY27 actual, Q2 FY27 guide Bar chart showing NVIDIA revenue at $44.1 billion in Q1 fiscal 2026, $81.6 billion in Q1 fiscal 2027, and a guidance of $91.0 billion for Q2 fiscal 2027. $0 $20B $40B $60B $80B $100B $44.1B Q1 FY26 (Apr 2025) $81.6B Q1 FY27 (Apr 2026) $91.0B Q2 FY27 (Guide) NVIDIA Quarterly Revenue ($ billions) Dashed bar = company guidance, midpoint of $91.0B ± 2%
Source: NVIDIA Q1 FY2027 press release, May 20, 2026. Q1 FY26 revenue derived from reported +85% YoY growth.

What the big picture says

Even with the after-hours pullback, the print confirmed rather than contradicted the AI-capex thesis. NVIDIA’s Data Center customers — Microsoft, Meta, Amazon, Google, Oracle, and a growing roster of sovereign buyers — continue to commit to multi-year orders. The $91 billion Q2 guide presumes that demand environment does not crack in the next 90 days.

The risk is symmetric. As long as hyperscaler capex keeps stair-stepping higher, every quarter is another beat-and-raise. The moment one quarter falls short, the unwind in a $5 trillion market-cap leader can be violent. Tonight’s modest after-hours weakness is a small reminder that even unimpeachable numbers can no longer always clear an unimpeachable setup.

Sources

Disclosure: This article was produced with AI assistance and reviewed before publication. It is for informational purposes only and is not investment advice.

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