Nvidia’s first-quarter earnings report will likely signal a shift in the company’s growth narrative, heavily influenced by the new reality of U.S. export curbs on its China market sales. The ban on the H20 chip alone is set to incur a $5.5 billion charge, a stark indicator of the diminishing returns from a region that previously contributed 13% of Nvidia’s total revenue.
The challenge for Nvidia now is to demonstrate its resilience and ability to adapt to these regulatory changes. Analysts are focused on whether the company can adequately compensate for the projected multi-billion dollar losses in China, with Susquehanna estimating a $1 billion sales hit in the April quarter and ongoing losses of up to $4.5 billion per quarter. This pressure on revenue is expected to lead to a significant decline in adjusted gross margins, potentially by over 11 percentage points.
While the company is exploring new avenues, including a reported new AI chipset for China and expanding into regions like the Middle East due to eased export rules, the immediate impact of the China restrictions will be the dominant theme. CEO Jensen Huang’s frank assessment that the U.S. curbs have been a “failure” and have spurred Chinese rivals highlights the complex landscape Nvidia now navigates, prompting investors to adjust their expectations accordingly.
Nvidia’s New Reality: Export Curbs Reshape Q1 Earnings Narrative
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