The Pak Banker

Nvidia full-year sales outlook tops analyst views

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Chip maker Nvidia Corp forecast sales for its current fiscal year that topped Wall Street expectatio­ns, sending its shares up 8 percent in late trading.

The Santa Clara, California-based company said it expected revenues for its fiscal 2020 year to be "flat or down slightly" from the $11.7 billion it recorded in the just-ended fiscal year. The forecast exceeds the $10.8 billion in revenue that analysts expected, according to IBES data from Refinitiv.

Fourth-quarter revenues fell for Nvidia, which supplies chips for gaming computers and artificial intelligen­ce work and is coming off record highs early last when demand for its chips for mining crypto currencies sent sales soaring.

The just-ended fiscal year was Nvidia's best ever, with sales up more than 21 percent from a year earlier, but sputtered to what Chief Executive Jensen Huang called a "disappoint­ing finish."

Over the course of the fiscal year, demand for chips for mining vanished and a slowdown in China dampened Nvidia sales.

"But the China economy is in the final analysis a growth economy, so we're looking forward to it recovering," Huang said on a conference call with investors. "And gaming is one of the most important pastimes of their culture."

Nvidia reported profit for the fiscal fourth-quarter ended Jan. 27 above Wall Street estimates. Its outlook for the 2020 fiscal first quarter missed analyst expectatio­ns only slightly and its data center business, where it competes against Intel Corp, did not fall as far as analysts had feared.

"Not-as-bad-as-feared has replaced the better-thanexpect­ed for a lot of companies this earnings season," analyst Ivan Feinseth of Tigress Financial Partners said.

Nvidia has entered into newer growth areas such as data centers and self-driving cars as it looks beyond its bread-and-butter business of selling chips that enhance video game graphics. Analysts had been concerned about Nvidia's fast-growing data business because Intel, the biggest supplier of chips used in data centers, last month gave a lower-thanexpect­ed sales forecast on slower buying from cloud computing customers, especially in China.

But Nvidia's data center business appeared to be spared from that slowdown, bringing in $679 million in the fourth quarter. That was lower than the year before, but slightly ahead of analyst expectatio­ns, according to data from FactSet.

"There was just a level of cautiousne­ss across all of the enterprise customers and the cloud service providers that we've not experience­d in a while," Huang said on the call. "It has to be temporary. The computing needs of Earth have certainly not been satisfied with what we shipped last quarter."

Nvidia has grown at a rapid pace in the past few years, but a slowdown in China and a fading cyrptocurr­ency craze have started to weigh on its sales. Fourthquar­ter total revenue fell to $2.21 billion from $2.91 billion, but came above its already lowered estimate of $2.20 billion.

The chip designer forecast first-quarter revenue of $2.20 billion, plus or minus 2 percent, for the quarter. Analysts on average were expecting revenue of $2.28 billion, according to IBES data from Refinitiv.

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