Key Takeaways
- Nvidia releases Q4 fiscal 2026 results Wednesday after market close, with Wall Street projecting $61B in data center revenue, reflecting 70% year-over-year growth.
- Adjusted EPS projections stand at $1.53, compared to $0.89 in the year-ago quarter.
- Gross margin remains the critical metric — analysts project approximately 75%, with any decline potentially indicating reduced pricing power.
- Competitive pressures intensify as Meta finalizes a substantial AMD GPU agreement and hyperscalers advance their proprietary AI chip development.
- Nvidia shares have moved sideways since October with 3.4% gains, while AMD has surged 32% during the same timeframe.
Nvidia will unveil its fourth-quarter fiscal 2026 financial results following Wednesday’s market close on February 25.
Investor attention remains intensely focused on the report. Wall Street analysts surveyed by FactSet project data center revenue will reach $61 billion for the quarter — representing 70% growth compared to the corresponding period last year.
For context, Nvidia generated merely $3.6 billion in data center revenue during Q4 2023, coinciding with ChatGPT’s initial launch period. The expansion trajectory since that time has been remarkable.
Adjusted earnings per share forecasts point to $1.53, rising from $0.89 in the prior-year quarter — representing 72% growth.
Analysts emphasize that the most revealing metric goes beyond revenue or EPS. Gross margin takes center stage.
Gross Margin Takes Center Stage as Key Indicator
Consensus forecasts place Nvidia’s gross margin around 75% for the quarter, advancing from 73% one year earlier. GAAP-based estimates come in at 74.8%.
This metric carries substantial weight because it reveals whether Nvidia maintains its ability to command premium prices for its GPU offerings.
Two factors have sustained that pricing advantage: the exceptional performance capabilities of Nvidia’s Hopper and Blackwell GPU architectures, and persistent demand levels that have exceeded available supply.
Should Nvidia provide fiscal 2027 gross margin guidance in the 74–75% range or above, market participants would likely interpret this positively. Such guidance would indicate customers remain willing to pay premium rates for forthcoming products including Blackwell Ultra and the Vera Rubin GPU.
Should gross margin guidance fall into the low 70s or lower territory, investors would face a markedly different scenario — one suggesting competitive forces are beginning to exert meaningful pressure.
Competitive Pressures Intensify Across the Market
The competitive environment has evolved considerably during recent months.
Meta Platforms finalized a substantial agreement with AMD on Tuesday to deploy its GPUs across certain data center facilities. This marks the second major AMD partnership in recent months — OpenAI established a comparable arrangement in October.
Both agreements included AMD providing warrants to acquire approximately 10% of its outstanding shares at one penny per share, contingent upon achieving performance targets. While Nvidia maintains partnerships with both Meta and OpenAI, the company has not extended equity-based incentives.
Amazon Web Services, Microsoft Azure, and Google Cloud are each advancing proprietary AI chip development programs for customer offerings. Multiple AI chip startups are simultaneously pursuing market opportunities.
AMD’s data center revenue currently represents less than one-tenth of Nvidia’s total, and demonstrated slower growth rates when AMD released its own Q4 results earlier this month.
Despite substantial AI infrastructure spending forecasts for 2026, Nvidia shares have moved sideways since October — posting 3.4% gains while AMD has advanced 32% during the identical timeframe.
Nvidia closed Tuesday’s trading session at $192.85, advancing 0.7% for the day.
CEO Jensen Huang will conduct an analyst conference call at 5 p.m. Eastern time Wednesday following the earnings announcement.

