NVIDIA Financial Results for First Quarter Fiscal 2024, Gaming Down 38% YoY
NVIDIA today reported revenue for the first quarter ended April 30, 2023, of $7.19 billion, down 13% from a year ago and up 19% from the previous quarter. GAAP earnings per diluted share for the quarter were $0.82, up 28% from a year ago and up 44% from the previous quarter.
Non-GAAP earnings per diluted share were $1.09, down 20% from a year ago and up 24% from the previous quarter.
"The computer industry is going through two simultaneous transitions—accelerated computing and generative AI," said Jensen Huang, founder and CEO of NVIDIA. "A trillion dollars of installed global data center infrastructure will transition from general purpose to accelerated computing as companies race to apply generative AI into every product, service and business process."Our entire data center family of products—H100, Grace CPU, Grace Hopper Superchip, NVLink, Quantum 400 InfiniBand and BlueField-3 DPU—is in production. We are significantly increasing our supply to meet surging demand for them," he said.
During the first quarter of fiscal 2024, NVIDIA returned to shareholders $99 million in cash dividends.
NVIDIA will pay its next quarterly cash dividend of $0.04 per share on June 30, 2023, to all shareholders of record on June 8, 2023.
Outlook
NVIDIA's outlook for the second quarter of fiscal 2024 is as follows:
- Revenue is expected to be $11.00 billion, plus or minus 2%.
- GAAP and non-GAAP gross margins are expected to be 68.6% and 70.0%, respectively, plus or minus 50 basis points.
- GAAP and non-GAAP operating expenses are expected to be approximately $2.71 billion and $1.90 billion, respectively.
- GAAP and non-GAAP other income and expense are expected to be an income of approximately $90 million, excluding gains and losses from non-affiliated investments.
- GAAP and non-GAAP tax rates are expected to be 14.0%, plus or minus 1%, excluding any discrete items.
Highlights
NVIDIA achieved progress since its previous earnings announcement in these areas:
Data Center
- First-quarter revenue was a record $4.28 billion, up 14% from a year ago and up 18% from the previous quarter.
- Launched four inference platforms that combine the company's full-stack inference software with the latest NVIDIA Ada, NVIDIA Hopper and NVIDIA Grace Hopper processors.
- Announced that Google Cloud is the first cloud provider offering the new NVIDIA L4 Tensor Core GPU to accelerate generative AI applications.
- Introduced NVIDIA AI Foundations to help businesses create and operate custom large language models and generative AI models trained with their own proprietary data for domain-specific tasks.
- Unveiled the NVIDIA cuLitho software library for computational lithography to accelerate the design and manufacturing of next-gen semiconductors.
- Expanded its partners offering new products and services based on the NVIDIA H100 Tensor Core GPU — including Amazon Web Services, Google Cloud, Microsoft Azure and Oracle Cloud Infrastructure.
- Partnered with ServiceNow to build generative AI across enterprise IT.
- Announced a collaboration with Medtronic to build an AI platform for medical devices.
- Joined with Dell Technologies in Project Helix to deliver full-stack solutions to help enterprises build and deploy trustworthy generative AI applications.
- Announced it is integrating NVIDIA AI Enterprise software into Microsoft's Azure Machine Learning to help enterprises accelerate their AI initiatives.
Gaming
- First-quarter revenue was $2.24 billion, down 38% from a year ago and up 22% from the previous quarter.
- Announced the GeForce RTX 4060 family of GPUs, bringing the advancements of NVIDIA Ada Lovelace architecture and DLSS, starting at $299.
- Launched the GeForce RTX 4070 GPU based on the Ada architecture, which enables DLSS 3, real-time ray tracing and the ability to run most modern games at over 100 frames per second at 1440p resolution.
- Added 36 DLSS gaming titles, bringing the total number of games and apps to 300.
- Made path tracing available for the first time on a major gaming title through collaboration with CD PROJEKT RED on an update to Cyberpunk 2077.
- Expanded GeForce NOW's game titles to more than 1,600, including the first Microsoft Xbox game, Gears 5.
Professional Visualization
- First-quarter revenue was $295 million, down 53% from a year ago and up 31% from the previous quarter.
- Announced NVIDIA Omniverse Cloud, a fully managed service running in Microsoft Azure, for the development and deployment of industrial metaverse applications.
- Expanded its collaboration with Microsoft to connect Microsoft 365 applications with Omniverse.
- Announced six new NVIDIA RTX GPUs for mobile and desktop workstations based on the Ada architecture.
Automotive
- First-quarter revenue was a record $296 million, up 114% from a year ago and up 1% from the previous quarter.
- Announced that its automotive design win pipeline has grown to $14 billion over the next six years, up from $11 billion a year ago.
- Announced that the world's leading electric vehicle maker BYD will extend its use of NVIDIA DRIVE Orin across new models.
CFO Commentary
Commentary on the quarter by Colette Kress, NVIDIA's executive vice president and chief financial officer, is available at https://investor.nvidia.com/.
Conference Call and Webcast Information
NVIDIA will conduct a conference call with analysts and investors to discuss its first quarter fiscal 2024 financial results and current financial prospects today at 2 p.m. Pacific time (5 p.m. Eastern time). A live webcast (listen-only mode) of the conference call will be accessible at NVIDIA's investor relations website, https://investor.nvidia.com. The webcast will be recorded and available for replay until NVIDIA's conference call to discuss its financial results for its second quarter of fiscal 2024.
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Senior Member
Posts: 2042
Joined: 2008-07-16
I was thinking the same:
RTX 4090: https://www.compari.ro/CategorySearch.php?st=rtx+4090 - That's roughly €2000
25 pages of cars under €2000: https://www.olx.ro/auto-masini-moto-ambarcatiuni/autoturisme/?currency=EUR&search%5Bfilter-float-price:to%5D=2000
(And yes, I know all these cars are old and beaten up, but most of them still work and will take you to work day in and day out)
Prices for electronics are beyond ridiculous today.
Senior Member
Posts: 242
Joined: 2021-02-11
Back in the day, on the university, I bought my beaten up car + laptop for 1800€. It was a price of a very expensive laptop, like Macbooks. Today the car and laptop still works (little problems of course). I'm the kind of consumer that brands hate, I mantain my things until they desintegrate.
GPUs prices went out of control. Is still possible to build a nice computer for a good price, not top of the line but very competent still, some components went down in price in the last months. But then we have the GPU part to consider and this is a headache. Second hand marked is quite nice with Ampere and RDNA2 nowadays, but is understandable that not everyone wants a used card.
I have friends that are downgrading the GPU class nowadays, back in the day (Kepler, Maxwell, Pascal) they were buying xx80 class cards, and today they are going for xx70 or xx60. Lets be real, wages are not going up at the rate of cost of living, only giving the solution for many to buy lower tier cards. An RTX 4080 is almost 2 minimum wages in my country (yeah crap economy, thats life).
Senior Member
Posts: 1477
Joined: 2014-04-21
Yeah, just look what the shyt did in its contribution to global warming.
Senior Member
Posts: 2503
Joined: 2005-05-04
Gaming revenue jumped 22% from last quarter, so 4070/4070ti must not be rotting on shelves like some people might think LOL
Senior Member
Posts: 3660
Joined: 2007-05-31
On other hand, buying a gaming GPU at the price of a 2nd hand car, is not a priority on the actual context...
Even more when outsider is near 1/2 of the price (despite still too expensive too) for near equivalent.
AND the bad reputation it get with the mining hype (lot of clients of the shop i extra work don't want NVidia whatever it is a better GPU)...
H. Ford have said something about what result doesn't show...