Nvidia forecasts higher revenue as China clouds future

By Arsheeya Bajwa and Stephen Nellis

(Reuters) -Nvidia forecast third-quarter revenue above Wall Street estimates on Wednesday, helped by robust demand for its artificial intelligence chips from cloud providers expanding infrastructure to power generative AI technology.

The AI market bellwether expects revenue of $54 billion, plus or minus 2%, in the third quarter, compared with analysts’ average estimate of $53.14 billion, according to data compiled by LSEG. The company said it has not assumed any shipments of its H20 chips to China in the outlook.

Shares of the world’s most valuable firm fell 2.5% in extended trading. Nvidia shares have gained more than a third so far in 2025, outpacing the benchmark S&P 500 Index’s year-to-date rise of nearly 10%.

But the company has been caught in the crossfire of the trade war between Washington and Beijing, as the world’s two largest economies claw for dominance of generative AI technology.  The company said it had not assumed any H20 chip shipments to China in the outlook and that there were no H20 sales to China-based customers in the second quarter.

Still, demand has surged for Nvidia’s advanced chips that can speedily process the large amounts of data used by generative AI applications as businesses race each other to dominate the new technology. 

Big Tech companies including Meta Platforms and Microsoft have been spending liberally to support their AI ambitions, and Nvidia is the biggest beneficiary, with a significant chunk of this spending funneled toward its chips.

The company said that about half of its $41 billion in data center revenue came from large cloud service providers during its fiscal second quarter.

Enthusiasm for AI stocks, centered around Nvidia as Wall Street engaged in picks-and-shovels trading, has been the dominating force behind the rally of the S&P 500 Index over the last two years.

In an unprecedented deal with U.S. President Donald Trump, Nvidia has agreed to pay the government 15% of some of its revenue in China in exchange for a reversal of restrictions that curbed sales of its H20 chips to China. But Beijing has cautioned domestic companies about imports and sources said that Nvidia has halted production of H20 chips.

Nvidia had in May expected the curbs to shave off $8 billion in sales from the July quarter. The company reported revenue of $46.74 billion for the second quarter, beating estimates of $46.06 billion.

(Reporting by Arsheeya Bajwa in Bengaluru; Max A. Cherney and Stephen Nellis in San Francisco; Editing by Maju Samuel, Sayantani Ghosh and Matthew Lewis)

More From Author

Ofer Harduf rejoins JPMorgan from venture capital firm as bank expands tech team, memo shows

HP beats third-quarter revenue estimates on AI PC adoption, Windows 11 upgrade

Live Market Pulse

The charting technology is provided by TradingView. Learn how to use theTradingView Stock Screener.