Why is Nvidia stock soaring before Q4 earnings? Here’s $65.9B reason

Why is Nvidia stock soaring before Q4 earnings? Here’s $65.9B reason

Nvidia stock (NASDAQ: NVDA) ticked higher on Monday as Wall Street headed into the chipmaker’s Feb. 25 earnings report with expectations already sky-high.

The rally came as the analysts are modeling roughly $65 billion-plus in quarterly revenue, a level that would again underline how central Nvidia has become to AI infrastructure spending.

The next two days now come down to a familiar question: will Nvidia beat, and will it beat enough?

Nvidia stock: Why Q4 estimates are so big

At the core of the optimism is Blackwell, Nvidia’s next-generation platform that cloud giants are building into their AI data centers.

Nvidia has said it expects about $65.0 billion in fiscal fourth-quarter revenue, plus or minus 2%, and the Zacks consensus sits around $65.56 billion.

The Wall Street consensus remains around $65.47 billion, alongside expectations for $1.52 in EPS, about 71% growth from a year earlier.

The reason those numbers look achievable is that Blackwell is being treated less like a single chip and more like the default “engine” for training and running large AI models in the cloud.

At Nvidia’s developer conference, CEO Jensen Huang said AWS, Microsoft Azure, Google Cloud and Oracle planned to embed Blackwell GPUs into their infrastructure, highlighting broad hyperscaler buy-in.

The company has also been stacking long-duration demand signals.

Nvidia struck a multiyear deal to supply Meta with “millions” of chips, including Blackwell and Rubin, and the analysts estimates that the agreement could be worth $50 billion.

That backdrop helps explain why investors often treat Nvidia earnings as a read-through on the entire AI capex cycle.

Nvidia’s Q4 earnings report is treated as a “major event for stock markets,” reflecting the company’s outsized influence on indexes and AI sentiment.

Also Read: Why did Nvidia sell its Arm stake after trying to buy it?

The uncomfortable setup

The flip side of record expectations is that they raise the bar for what counts as “good news.”

When a stock becomes the market’s AI bellwether, strong results can still trigger profit-taking if guidance isn’t clearly above what traders already priced in.

That’s why the reaction function matters as much as the headline beat.

Investors will be listening for two things beyond top-line results: how quickly Blackwell supply is ramping, and whether customers’ spending plans look steady or start showing budget fatigue.

Any sign of pushouts, product-transition friction, or slower order cadence can hit sentiment quickly because Nvidia is now being valued as the infrastructure layer of the AI economy.

The pre-earnings move looks like cautious optimism. Some investors may already be bracing for volatility once the numbers hit.

With consensus hovering around the mid-$60 billions for quarterly revenue and EPS growth expected to remain explosive, Nvidia seems to be delivering a verdict on whether the AI buildout is still accelerating, or merely staying strong.

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