Nvidia posts record $18B third quarter revenue, cites generative AI as primary driver

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Nvidia posts record $18B third quarter revenue, cites generative AI as primary driver

Nvidia announced third quarter revenue for 2023 in the amount of $18.12 billion, a company record, as the firm’s market cap now reaches $1.22 trillion

Nvidia announced third quarter revenue for 2023 in the amount of $18.12 billion, a company record, as the firm’s market cap now reaches $1.22 trillion.

The better-than-expected earnings follow a 12-month growth trend during which the company saw earnings increase by 34% over last quarter, and 206% over Q3 2022.

While the company beat estimates, the strong quarter likely didn’t surprise investors or shareholders as the company’s stock recently spiked to an all time high of $499.60 per share.

Nvidia founder and CEO Jensen Huang credited the growth to AI hardware sales:

“Our strong growth reflects the broad industry platform transition from general-purpose to accelerated computing and generative AI of NVIDIA.”

He continued, mentioning that AI startups, consumer internet companies and cloud service providers were the “first movers,” adding that “the next waves are starting to build.”

The record quarter comes at a transitional time for both the company, which is headquartered in Santa Clara, California, and the global chip market.

Related: How an ‘internet of AIs’ will take artificial intelligence to the next level

The U.S. recently issued a partial ban on chip exports to a number of countries including China. Over the past several quarters, approximately 20-25 percent of the company’s data center revenue has come from the Chinese market.

Based on Nvidia’s most recent disclosed data center revenue of $14.51 billion, this indicates that as much as $3.6 billion in Q3 earnings may be attributable to sales in China.

The company’s chief financial officer, Colette Kress, told shareholders during a call to discuss the Q3 earnings that the company expected the export ban to cause its business in China to “decine significantly” in the fourth quarter. However, Kress also added that the company believes those losses will be “more than offset by strong growth in other regions.”