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Nvidia Corp.’s data center sales topped $1 billion for the first time at the start of 2020 and beat expectations for earnings and sales, but shares slipped in late trading Thursday following nearly a week of record closes.
Nvidia NVDA, -2.17% reported first-quarter net income of $917 million, or $1.47 a share, compared with $394 million, or 64 cents a share, in the year-ago period. Adjusted earnings were $1.80 a share, compared with 88 cents a share in the year-ago period. Revenue rose to $3.08 billion from $2.22 billion in the year-ago quarter.
Analysts surveyed by FactSet had forecast earnings of $1.65 a share on revenue of $2.97 billion. Nvidia had forecast revenue of $2.94 billion to $3.06 billion, which had factored in a $100 million headwind from the COVID-19 pandemic.
Shares ticked down about 1% in after-hours trading immediately following the release, after a 2.2% decline in the regular session to close at $351.01. It was the first decline for Nvidia after a run of four consecutive closes at record highs.
Business in the Age of COVID-19: Nvidia should dodge coronavirus effects thanks to data centers and videogames
Nvidia’s two largest segments are chips for gaming and data centers, both of which seem safe from negative effects from the coronavirus after emerging from a year of struggle at the end of 2019. Data-center operators continue to push new chips into their servers to increase machine-learning capabilities for cloud customers and their own usage, while videogames have enjoyed a strong surge amid shelter-in-place requirements.
Nvidia launched new data-center products last week as part of its annual GTC event, introducing a new architecture for its graphics-processing units, or GPUs, dubbed Ampere. Chief Executive Jensen Huang said then that the new chips were already being shipped to customers including the largest cloud-computing offerings such as Amazon.com Inc.’s AMZN, -2.05% Amazon Web Services, Microsoft Corp.’s MSFT, -1.20% Azure and Alphabet Inc.’s GOOGL, -0.17% GOOG, -0.27% Google Cloud.
For more: Nvidia unveils Ampere GPU architecture for AI boost, and the first target is coronavirus
Nvidia reported gaming revenue of $1.34 billion, up from $1.06 billion in the year-ago period. Data center revenue came in at $1.14 billion, up from $634 million a year ago. Analysts had expected a 24% rise in gaming sales to $1.3 billion from a year ago, and a 62% surge in data-center sales to $1.03 billion.
“Our data center business achieved a record and its first $1 billion quarter,” said Jensen Huang, Nvidia founder and chief executive, in a statement. “Nvidia is well positioned to advance the most powerful technology forces of our time — cloud computing and AI.”
Nvidia expects second-quarter revenue of $3.58 billion to $3.72 billion, while analysts had forecast revenue of $3.25 billion.
Nvidia shares are up 49% for the year. In comparison, the PHLX Semiconductor Index SOX, -2.70%, is down 3% in 2020, the S&P 500 index SPX, -0.77% is down 9%, and the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite Index COMP, -0.96% is up nearly 4%.
Of the 40 analysts who cover Nvidia, 32 have buy or overweight ratings, five have hold ratings, and three have sell ratings, along with an average price target of $325.18, according to FactSet data.