3 NVIDIA Storylines That Matter

Photo of Joel South
By Joel South Published

Quick Read

  • NVIDIA (NVDA) excluded all China Data Center compute revenue from its $78B Q1 FY2027 guidance following export restrictions.

  • NVIDIA did not reaffirm its $500B revenue target despite holding $95.2B in supply commitments.

  • NVIDIA secured GPU deals with Meta and CoreWeave as multi-year cloud agreements doubled to $26B.

This post may contain links from our sponsors and affiliates, and Flywheel Publishing may receive compensation for actions taken through them.
3 NVIDIA Storylines That Matter

© Shutterstock / Piotr Swat

NVIDIA (NASDAQ:NVDA | NVDA Price Prediction) reported fiscal Q4 2026 earnings after the close on February 25, 2026, delivering results that cleared both official consensus and the buy-side whisper number. Here are the three storylines that matter most heading into fiscal 2027.

1. China Revenue: A Conspicuous Absence

The most significant signal in NVIDIA’s forward guidance was what it deliberately left out. Q1 FY2027 revenue guidance of $78.0 billion explicitly excludes any Data Center compute revenue from China. The call-out is notable precisely because management felt it warranted explicit disclosure.

China exposure has been a recurring complication. NVIDIA took $4.5 billion in H20 inventory charges in Q1 FY2026 tied to export restrictions, and by Q3 FY2026, H20 sales had become effectively immaterial. With $95.2 billion in total supply-related commitments on the books, any further tightening of export controls represents a real balance sheet risk, not just a revenue headwind.

Jensen Huang offered no specific forward commentary on China’s contribution across calendar 2026, but the guidance structure speaks clearly: the guidance structure implies zero China Data Center compute revenue for at least the next quarter.

2. The $500 Billion Target: Still in Play, But Not Updated

Huang had previously signaled visibility into $500 billion in combined Blackwell and Rubin revenue. NVIDIA did not update or reaffirm that figure in the Q4 report.

The numbers do show a steep ramp. Quarterly revenue progressed from $44.1 billion in Q1 FY2026 to $68.1 billion in Q4, a 55% climb across a single fiscal year. At the Q1 FY2027 guided midpoint of $78 billion, the annualized run rate reaches roughly $312 billion. Closing the gap to $500 billion would require sustained acceleration well beyond current trajectory.

The demand pipeline is real. Multi-year cloud service agreements grew to $26.0 billion from $12.6 billion sequentially, and partnerships with Meta (NASDAQ:META) (millions of Blackwell and Rubin GPUs), CoreWeave (NASDAQ:CRWV) (5 GW by 2030), and OpenAI (10+ GW) anchor the long-term order book. The Vera Rubin platform, promising up to a 10x reduction in inference token cost versus Blackwell, is the next catalyst.

3. The Whisper Number: Cleared Decisively

Wall Street consensus for Q1 FY2027 revenue sat near $72 billion. The buy-side whisper was estimated above the official consensus. NVIDIA guided to $78.0 billion, plus or minus 2%, clearing both thresholds.

The Q4 print extended a consistent beat pattern. EPS came in at $1.62 against a $1.51 consensus estimate, a 7.28% beat, while revenue of $68.1 billion topped the $66.2 billion estimate by $1.9 billion. That marks five consecutive quarters of EPS beats, with surprise magnitudes ranging from 3.96% to 8.01%.

Analyst consensus carries a $254 price target implying roughly 30% upside from current levels, though prediction markets assign only a 43% probability to NVDA closing above $200 by month-end, reflecting the gap between fundamental optimism and near-term price expectations.

The key variable for all three storylines converges on one question: whether the China exclusion in guidance proves temporary or structural.

Photo of Joel South
About the Author Joel South →

Joel South covers large-cap stocks, dividend investing, and major market trends, with a focus on earnings analysis, valuation, and turning complex data into actionable insights for investors.

He brings more than 15 years of experience as an investor and financial journalist, including 12 years at The Motley Fool, where he served as an investment analyst, Bureau Chief, and later led the Fool.com investing news desk. He has also co-hosted an investing podcast and appeared across TV and radio discussing market trends.

Featured Reads

Our top personal finance-related articles today. Your wallet will thank you later.

Continue Reading

Top Gaining Stocks

CBOE Vol: 1,568,143
PSKY Vol: 12,285,993
STX Vol: 7,378,346
ORCL Vol: 26,317,675
DDOG Vol: 6,247,779

Top Losing Stocks

LKQ
LKQ Vol: 4,367,433
CLX Vol: 13,260,523
SYK Vol: 4,519,455
MHK Vol: 1,859,865
AMGN Vol: 3,818,618