In addition, NVIDIA’s automotive segment is expected to have taken a hit during the quarter.Įven as a plethora of companies curtailed their expenditures amid the ongoing macroeconomic weakness, NVIDIA chose to maintain its recent acquisition spree. However, sales channel disruptions due to the coronavirus-induced lockdowns may have moderated some of these gains. Moreover, the GeForce RTX SUPER GPUs are also expected to have boosted the company’s top-line metric. “ would be strong in normal times, and likely even more impressive in light of the current pandemic."Ĭonsequently, the analyst increased his long-term EPS estimate to $9 per share, reflecting the impact of Mellanox’s acquisition that “could be as much as 5%-8% accretive to earnings” for NVIDIA.įor Q1 2021, Zacks consensus estimate for NVIDIA’s revenue is currently pinned at $2.99 billion, translating to year-over-year growth of 34.9 percent.Īpart from the strength in hyperscale and cloud spheres, NVIDIA is expected to have benefited from a number of AAA gaming titles that now support its RTX Ray Tracing technology. As a case in point, Deutsche Bank ( ETR:DBK) analyst Ross Seymore raised NVIDIA’s stock price target today to $300 from $290 while retaining a ‘Hold’ rating for the stock. NVIDIA’s upcoming earnings announcement continues to spur analyst upgrades. Moreover, according to the BMO analyst, NVIDIA can “grow its datacenter business to at least a $20B annual run rate versus the $4.8B for this year.” Consequently, the analyst believes that the company can grow its EPS to a whopping $20 per share over the long-term. " uniquely positioned to continue to benefit from a massive shift in the compute landscape.” “While no one single event drives the change in thinking, the company's continued execution on the datacenter side, along with the latest product rollout, warrants a more positive stance on the shares.”
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |