Nvidia Hits Record Revenue for 12th Consecutive Quarter, Yet After-Hours Shares Edge Lower
Ana Fernanda Reporter
| 2026-05-21 11:44:25
NEW YORK — Nvidia, the world’s most valuable company by market capitalization, has delivered yet another consensus-shattering earnings surprise, marking its 12th consecutive quarter of record-breaking revenue. However, in a stark demonstration of just how loftily high Wall Street’s expectations have become, the blockbuster performance failed to sustain upward momentum in extended trading, with shares tipping into negative territory after hours.
According to its regulatory filing on May 20 (local time), the Silicon Valley chip giant posted a staggering revenue of $81.62 billion (approximately 122.3 trillion Korean won) for its first fiscal quarter, which spans from February to April.
The figure comfortably outpaced Wall Street’s consensus estimate of $78.85 billion. The company’s profitability was equally robust; Nvidia reported an earnings per share (EPS) of $2.39, dramatically eclipsing the $1.87 projected by market analysts.
Despite the stellar "earnings surprise," investors appeared to adopt a "sell the news" stance. Anticipation ahead of the closing bell had initially pushed Nvidia's stock up by 1.30% during the regular session, closing at $223.47. However, immediately following the release of the financial snapshot, shares reversed course and fluctuated downward in after-hours electronic trading.
Market analysts suggest that Nvidia has become a victim of its own historic success. With AI-driven demand heavily priced into semiconductor equities over the past several years, merely beating estimates is no longer a guaranteed catalyst for stock rallies. Investors are increasingly demanding flawless forward-looking guidance and astronomical growth rates to justify current valuation multiples.
The post-earnings cooling effect quickly rippled across the broader semiconductor sector. Rival chipmakers and key supply chain partners—including Intel, AMD, and Micron Technology—had all posted strong gains during the regular New York trading session. However, matching Nvidia's trajectory, their shares also drifted slightly lower into the red during late-night after-hours trading as market enthusiasm normalized.
While short-term technical profit-taking dominated the immediate aftermath of the call, the underlying fundamentals highlighted in the Q1 report reaffirm Nvidia’s uncontested stranglehold on the global artificial intelligence infrastructure market.
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