If you're wondering what single event could move global markets right now, the answer isn't a Fed meeting or a geopolitical crisis. It's Nvidia Corporation (NVDA) reporting earnings on November 19.
That might sound like hyperbole, but consider this: Nvidia has become the linchpin of Big Tech's multitrillion-dollar AI infrastructure buildout. The company hit a $4.5 trillion market cap in October 2025—making it the first to reach that milestone—because its graphics processing units have become indispensable for AI applications and video gaming. When Nvidia speaks, the market listens.
Sure, the company's growth is decelerating from its previous blistering 50% pace. But we're talking about deceleration from stratospheric levels, not an actual slowdown. Data center demand continues driving substantial gains, and Big Tech shows no signs of pulling back on spending.
Why the Fed Is Flying Blind
Anita Gupta, CIO of Wealthbrix Capital Partners, told CNBC that near-term GDP weakness in the U.S. should prove temporary. She expects fourth-quarter GDP growth to slow by roughly one percentage point but anticipates a rebound in the first quarter of 2026 as government spending resumes.
Her optimism stems from tangible factors: the government's full resumption of flights and potential agreements on health expenditure that could boost health insurers. While consumer confidence has softened recently, she believes any drag on GDP will be short-lived and expects a recovery.
The bigger challenge? Policymakers are navigating without fresh inflation and labor data, creating what Fed Chair Jerome Powell recently described as "driving through fog." Markets now assign only a 50% probability to a December rate cut that was once considered nearly certain.
With headline CPI at 3% and core inflation hovering not far off, Gupta expects inflation to continue easing into 2026 despite tariff pressures. Even if the Fed skips December and markets react poorly in the moment, she remains confident the overall trajectory is toward lower rates. Eight Fed meetings are scheduled for 2026, including a January session that could deliver the first cut—a scenario she views as supportive for risk assets.
The Nvidia Effect on Tech Spending
Back to Nvidia. Gupta identifies the chipmaker's earnings as the next major catalyst for global equities, and the reasoning is straightforward. Geopolitical tensions—including the Russia-Ukraine conflict and gradual stabilization in Israel-Gaza—appear relatively contained from a market perspective right now.
Instead, investor focus has shifted to Big Tech capital expenditures. We're talking about nearly half a trillion dollars projected for 2026 alone, with an estimated $7 trillion in data center spending expected by 2030. Nvidia sits squarely at the center of this investment cycle as the world's leading manufacturer of high-end GPUs.
What the company communicates during its earnings call will be critical. Nvidia has been a major contributor to recent U.S. earnings growth, and any hints about demand trends—whether robust or softening—could reverberate across technology stocks and broader equity markets.
The market is essentially asking: Is AI spending sustainable at these levels? Can data center demand support continued growth even as the pace moderates? Nvidia's management will provide the clearest answers we're likely to get.
Price Action: NVDA stock was trading lower by 1.08% to $188.12 premarket at last check Monday.