By Max A. Cherney, Arsheeya Bajwa, Stephen Nellis
(Reuters) -Nvidia forecast its slowest revenue growth in seven quarters on Wednesday, failing to meet lofty expectations of some investors who have made it the world’s most valuable firm.
Shares of the Santa Clara, California-based company fell 5% after it posted results but quickly pared losses to trade down 1.5% after hours. During the regular session they closed 0.8% lower.
Expectations ran high ahead of the results, with Nvidia shares up more than 20% over the last two months and hitting an intraday record high on Monday. The stock has nearly quadrupled so far this year and is up more than ninefold over the last two years.
Nvidia is in the middle of launching its powerful Blackwell family of artificial-intelligence chips, which will weigh on the company’s gross margins initially but improve over time.
The new line of processors has been embraced by Nvidia’s customers and the company will exceed its initial projections of several billion dollars in sales of the processors in the fourth quarter, finance chief Colette Kress told analysts on a conference call on Wednesday.
Asked about media reports that a flagship liquid-cooled server containing 72 of the new chips was experiencing overheating issues during initial testing, Chief Executive Jensen Huang said there are no issues and that customers such as Microsoft, Oracle and CoreWeave are implementing the systems.
“There are no issues with our Grace Blackwell liquid-cooled systems,” Huang told Reuters. “The engineering is not easy at all, because what we’re doing is hard, but we’re in good shape.”
Initially the new line of chips will carry gross margins in the low 70% range, but will increase to the mid 70% range when production ramps up, Kress said.
The company forecast revenue of $37.5 billion, plus or minus 2% for the fourth quarter, compared with analysts’ average estimate of $37.09 billion according to data compiled by LSEG.
Still a stunning rate of growth thanks to huge demand for the company’s chips that make up the brains of complex generative AI systems, it marks a clear slowdown from previous quarters when Nvidia mostly posted sales that at least doubled.
“The age of AI is in full steam, propelling a global shift to NVIDIA computing,” Huang said in the earnings release. “Demand for Hopper and anticipation for Blackwell – in full production – are incredible as foundation model makers scale pretraining, post-training and inference,” he said, referring to two high-performing AI chips.