TLDR
- Nvidia’s most recent quarterly revenue hit $81 billion, with data center revenue topping $75 billion
- The company forecasts next quarter revenue of around $91 billion, beating Wall Street estimates
- Wall Street has 51 Buy ratings on NVDA, with an average price target of $305.67 — and zero Sells
- Nvidia raised $25 billion in its first corporate bond offering in five years, with $85 billion in demand
- A base-case model puts NVDA at around $630 by 2031, with a bull case above $1,100
Nvidia’s most recent quarter showed revenue of $81 billion, with data center revenue alone topping $75 billion. The company then guided for roughly $91 billion in the next quarter, clearing Wall Street’s bar again.
That kind of consistency is what keeps NVDA near the top of every buy list on the Street.
The stock currently holds 51 Buy ratings, 3 Hold ratings, and zero Sell ratings on MarketBeat. The average analyst price target sits at $305.67.
For long-term investors, the bigger question isn’t what Nvidia does next quarter — it’s where the stock could realistically land by 2031.
Three Scenarios for 2031
Analysts have laid out three paths forward for NVDA, depending on how AI spending plays out over the next several years.
In the bear case, AI infrastructure spending slows after the current buildout phase. Competition eats into margins, growth moderates, and revenue reaches around $180 billion by 2031. Under that scenario, the stock trades near $200.
The base case assumes AI adoption continues across industries and Nvidia holds its leadership position. Revenue hits approximately $350 billion, earnings per share approach $18, and applying a 35x earnings multiple gets you to a stock price near $630.
In the bull case, AI becomes one of the largest tech spending cycles in history. Nvidia expands into new markets, revenue exceeds $550 billion, and the stock clears $1,100. A probability-weighted model across all three scenarios lands at roughly $636.
Competitive Risks Are Real
Nvidia’s dominant position isn’t without challenges. Major customers — Microsoft, Google, Amazon, and Meta — are all building custom AI chips in-house. AMD and Broadcom are also pushing into AI hardware.
These efforts could chip away at Nvidia’s market share gradually over the coming years.
Still, Nvidia’s moat goes beyond silicon. Its software ecosystem — including CUDA, networking tools, and developer frameworks — makes switching to a competitor costly and slow. That stickiness is a key part of the long-term investment case.
CEO Jensen Huang has consistently framed AI as core global infrastructure, pointing to robotics, autonomous vehicles, healthcare, and sovereign AI programs as the next wave of demand drivers.
On the capital markets side, Nvidia recently raised $25 billion through its first corporate bond offering in five years. Demand for that offering reportedly hit $85 billion — nearly 3.4x oversubscribed — signaling strong investor confidence.
The next quarter’s guidance of $91 billion remains the most immediate data point to watch.
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