RESULTS from the world’s biggest technology companies have brought mostly good news. There’s just one missing piece: Nvidia.
The company, whose dominance in chips that do the heavy lifting for artificial intelligence (AI) computing has made it the focal point in a market captivated by the burgeoning technology, is not due to report earnings until May 22.
That’s well after other releases that have shown profits rising at a healthy clip, demand for AI tools boosting sales for cloud computing services and signs of continued heavy spending on AI gear.
“You have massive buyers of chips coming in saying we were already buying a ton, we are buying even more. The question for Nvidia is: is it enough?,” Mike Bailey, director of research at Fulton Breakefield Broenniman, said on Friday (May 3).
Nvidia shares rose as much as 3.6 per cent on Monday, adding more than US$70 billion in market value.
Among Nvidia’s biggest customers, Meta Platforms, Microsoft, Amazon.com and Alphabet have all indicated that capital expenditures will continue at the current pace or increase this year.
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Nvidia shares have rebounded since Apr 19, when AI hardware makers tumbled ahead of the first week of Big Tech earnings. The stock is up 20 per cent since then but it’s still down about 3 per cent from a March peak. With other AI hardware maker shares falling in the wake of strong earnings reports, it’s clear that expectations are high.
Rival chipmaker Advanced Micro Devices tumbled nearly 9 per cent on May 1 despite raising its forecast for AI accelerator sales this year to US$4 billion from US$3.5 billion. Super Micro Computer, the server maker whose shares have gained more than 190 per cent this year, dropped 14 per cent after its earnings report that included forecasts for revenue and profits that far exceeded the average of analyst estimates.
With earnings from about 80 per cent of the S&P 500 already in, technology and communication services companies are beating profit estimates at a stellar clip. Roughly 90 per cent of tech and communication services companies have topped earnings estimates, well ahead of the 79 per cent average for the benchmark, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
The trouble is that the results have had difficulty moving the needle for stocks after a rally that’s lifted the tech-heavy Nasdaq 100 Stock Index by more than 35 per cent over the past 12 months. Both groups rank at the bottom of the main S&P 500 sectors for stock price moves the day after earnings. The average move for the tech sector is down around 1.5 per cent while communications shares have fallen 2.7 per cent.
To UBS’s Solita Marcelli, AI computing stocks remain attractive with combined capital expenditures from Microsoft, Alphabet, Meta and Amazon expected to exceed US$200 billion this year, up US$20 billion from a previous estimate.
“We are encouraged by many positives in tech fundamentals during the first-quarter reporting season, which in our view continue to support the investment case for generative artificial intelligence,” said Marcelli, chief investment officer Americas at UBS Financial Services. BLOOMBERG