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Nvidia quarterly sales beat estimates

Data-centre business fuels growth

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“We are quickly adapting to the macro environmen­t, correcting inventory levels and paving the way for new products.” Jensen Huang

SAN FRANCISCO: Nvidia Corp, the most valuable US semiconduc­tor maker, posted quarterly sales that topped analysts’ estimates after its data-centre business helped offset sluggish demand for video-game chips.

While revenue declined 17% to Us$5.93bil (Rm26.9bil) in the fiscal third quarter, that handily beat the Us$5.79bil (Rm26.3bil) average estimate.

Data-centre revenue jumped 31%, also beating projection­s, compared with a 51% drop for the company’s gaming business.

Nvidia shares gained more than 2% in late trading Wednesday. They had closed at US$159.10 (RM723.11) earlier, down 46% for the year.

Though Nvidia’s fourth-quarter forecast was a little light of estimates, the report allayed investors’ fears that the industry is deteriorat­ing further.

Owners of large cloud-computing facilities are increasing­ly using Nvidia’s graphics chips to handle artificial intelligen­ce tasks, and that business has held up better than the sputtering personal-computer market.

Data-centre sales were helped by orders from US cloud service providers, with demand weakening in China, Nvidia said.

The division generated Us$3.83bil (Rm17.4bil) in total, compared with a Us$3.79bil (Rm17.2bil) estimate.

Nvidia announced further inroads into the data-centre market earlier Wednesday, when it said that Microsoft Corp will use its graphics chips, networking products and software for a new artificial intelligen­ce (AI) offering.

Nvidia’s leadership has argued that its broad range of technology for such systems gives it an advantage over competitor­s with partial solutions.

Data centres are a bright spot in a computing industry still mired in a slump.

Makers of chips for laptops and desktops suffered a steep decline in orders this year as recession-wary customers put off big-ticket electronic­s purchases.

That led to a buildup in inventory that the industry still needs to work through.

“We are quickly adapting to the macro environmen­t, correcting inventory levels and paving the way for new products,” chief executive officer Jensen Huang said in a statement.

After a massive spike in demand for home-office computers during the pandemic, spending on the devices collapsed more quickly than expected.

Company executives have argued that supply-chain disruption­s over the last three years have caused distortion­s in the market, accentuati­ng the industry’s boom times, and now, its bust.

The hope is that companies and consumers will eventually return to a level of spending that’s higher than before the pandemic.

The company expects fourth-quarter revenue to be about Us$6bil (Rm27.3bil), plus or minus 2%.

That compares with an estimate of Us$6.09bil (Rm27.7bil). Third-quarter profit came in at 58 US cents (RM2.64) a share, excluding some items, short of the 70 US cent (RM3.18) projection.

Nvidia built its reputation making electronic­s for gaming personal computers (PCS), and that business has gotten hammered along with the broader PC market.

Still, the division’s 51% decline last quarter wasn’t as bad as some analysts feared.

Nvidia’s Geforce graphics chips are a musthave for high-end PC owners looking for the most realistic gaming experience.

The chips also became popular with digital currency miners, though the crypto rout and changes to the way the asset is mined have undercut that market.

Nvidia also is caught up in the worsening standoff between China and the United States.

Washington is increasing­ly trying to cut off the Asian country from advanced chip technology, threatenin­g Nvidia’s access to that market.

Nvidia’s best AI offerings are now subject to licensing requiremen­ts for export to China, a hurdle that the company said may cost it hundreds of millions of dollars in lost revenue.

Nvidia recently debuted a new offering for that market that it says is compliant with the restrictio­ns.

The Santa Clara, California-based company said Wednesday that sales of other chips helped offset the slowdown in China.

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