
Nvidia posted extraordinary third-quarter fiscal 2026 results, beating Wall Street expectations and reinforcing its position at the heart of the AI boom. The company reported revenue of approximately $57 billion, up about 62% year-on-year, and earnings per share of $1.30, slightly above analyst estimates.
The standout driver was Nvidia’s data-centre business, which generated roughly $51.2 billion in revenue, a jump of about 66% from a year ago. CEO Jensen Huang described demand for its Blackwell GPU architecture and cloud-inference systems as “off the charts”, saying compute needs are accelerating across training and inference alike.
Nvidia also provided a bullish outlook for the next quarter, guiding for revenue around $65 billion, well ahead of consensus forecasts.
Even though GPUs and AI chips have been under scrutiny for oversupply risks and “AI bubble” talk, Nvidia appears to be bucking the trend. Management claimed the AI ecosystem is still in the early innings and that its platform spans every stage of AI from model training to inference to deployment.
For the broader tech sector, Nvidia’s hot performance matters more than just the numbers. Because its chips power many of the large-language-model providers, cloud-infrastructure players and AI startups, its demand and supply curves signal how the whole AI build-out is tracking.
That said, not all risks are gone. The company noted that export restrictions to China remain a headwind, and margins may face pressure as supply scales and competition intensifies. Analysts remain cautious about how long the current growth pace can sustain.
Nvidia’s Q3 is both a milestone and a bellwether, a milestone because it delivered record numbers; a bellwether because it signals that the AI infrastructure wave is far from cresting. For those watching where tech is heading, it confirms one thing the age of compute is in full motion.
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