Latest NVIDIA Guidance Shows Revenue Drop
Earnings season is still underway, and certain tech stocks have been drawing attention. While NVIDIA (NVDA) was considered by many to be one of the companies that came out of the COVID-19 pandemic-era ahead, its latest preliminary Q2 results may have proven a disappointment to investors.

Trajectory in Reverse?
At the end of last year, it looked to many like NVIDIA was on an upward trajectory. Among American mega-cap stocks, it was the best performer of the year. The need for technological solutions as swathes of workers across the globe was forced to stay at home to limit contagion pushed NVIDIA’s share value up by over 130% over the course of 2021. With its finger in the pie of the ever-developing metaverse and a strong specialisation in needed hardware, all lights were green for NVIDIA just last year.
However, 2022 has not been quite so kind to this top technology company’s bottom line. While it surpassed social media giant Meta (META) to become the seventh-largest U.S. firm by market capitalisation in early February, NVIDIA hasn’t been spared the effects of a broad-based downturn in American tech shares.
Inflation in the United States has consistently broken records in recent months, leading the Federal Open Market Committee to raise interest rates at each of its four most recent summits. Tech and growth stocks have begun to feel the burn, and NVIDIA shares are down almost 40% so far in 2022. In March, executives at the company even announced that new hiring would be frozen. NVIDIA’s preliminary Q2 results have not helped the matter.
Updated Estimates Depress Shares
On Monday, NVIDIA released guidance to the public that its results for the second quarter of 2022, due this coming August 24th, could very well come in lower than expected. Revenue for the quarter is estimated at $6.7 billion, over 17% less than originally expected. Gross margins are foreseen by the company to end up at just over 46%, as opposed to the previous estimate of 67.1%. (Source:The Wall Street Journal)
What could account for this large discrepancy between what was until so recently expected for NVIDIA’s Q2 results and the latest projected figures? Gaming revenue for the firm, according to company executives, has dropped by a third since Q2 2021; demand for graphics cards, one of NVIDIA’s core products, has also dropped so far this year. While NVIDIA isn’t the only firm in the sector struggling to maintain share values, an especially drastic drop was observed yesterday following the release of the latest guidance. By the ring of the closing bell on Monday, NVIDIA’s stock price had fallen by nearly 6.3%. (Source:Barrons)
While NVIDIA execs have reaffirmed that they’re cutting running expenses, the firm’s meteoric pandemic-era success could now be working to its disadvantage. NVIDIA chips are more available on the market than ever, which exerts downward pressure on their price. As COVID restrictions have moved, for the most part, to the rearview mirror, demand for gaming may be on a longer-term downtrend as well. While NVIDIA’s shares seem to have lost much of their previous momentum for the moment, whether this tech firm can recalibrate and succeed in the current economic environment remains to be seen.