Nvidia Corp. (NVDA) shares dropped 2.90% to $181.18 Tuesday morning, extending Monday's tech selloff as investors gear up for what Wedbush analyst Dan Ives is calling the "Super Bowl" of the stock market. Wednesday's third-quarter earnings report isn't just about one company anymore—it's become the bellwether for the entire AI sector.
The broader tech weakness has its roots in Federal Reserve commentary. Cautious remarks from Fed officials about inflation have investors rethinking their assumptions about a December rate cut, which sent a ripple through high-growth stocks. Add in anxiety about Nvidia's upcoming numbers and worries that AI stocks have gotten too crowded, and you've got a perfect storm of position-trimming.
The Earnings Catch-22
Here's where things get interesting. Despite all the near-term volatility, the long-term story for Nvidia remains compelling. Demand for the company's upcoming Blackwell chips is enormous, and the performance gap between Nvidia and competitors like AMD keeps widening.
But Deepwater Asset Management's Gene Munster points out a fascinating dilemma: Nvidia might be in a no-win situation for the immediate stock reaction. Beat expectations with strong guidance? Investors might worry about AI overspending. Deliver a modest beat? The market could interpret it as slowing growth. Either way, expect some turbulence regardless of what the numbers actually show.
What Wall Street Expects
Consensus estimates call for third-quarter revenue of $54.84 billion—a massive jump from $35.08 billion in the year-ago period. Earnings per share are projected at $1.25, compared to 81 cents last year.
Analyst sentiment heading into the report? Overwhelmingly bullish. Stifel recently raised its price target to $250, while Wells Fargo and Oppenheimer went even higher at $265. Keybanc reiterated its Buy rating with a $250 target.
Big News on Partnership Front
Adding another layer to the story, Microsoft (MSFT) and Nvidia announced a strategic partnership with Anthropic on Tuesday morning. The deal includes a combined $15 billion investment in the AI startup, with Anthropic committing to purchase $30 billion of Azure compute capacity.
The agreement expands Claude models' availability on Microsoft Azure and establishes collaboration to optimize Nvidia's next-generation Grace Blackwell and Vera Rubin architectures for Anthropic's workloads. It's the kind of deal that underscores just how central Nvidia has become to the AI infrastructure buildout.
The Fundamentals Tell a Different Story
While the stock price might be flashing warning signals in the short term, the underlying business fundamentals remain exceptional. Market data assigns Nvidia a near-perfect Growth score of 98.63 and a Quality score of 92.92, suggesting the company's operational health is rock-solid even as traders get nervous.
The real question isn't whether Nvidia is executing—by most measures, it clearly is. The question is whether expectations have gotten so high that even excellent results might disappoint. That's the paradox of being the market's most-watched stock: sometimes success isn't quite enough.
Wednesday's report will either validate the AI spending thesis or give investors reason to pause. Either way, it's required viewing for anyone paying attention to where tech markets are headed.