Nvidia (NVDA) came out with quarterly earnings of $1.87 per share, beating the Zacks Consensus Estimate of $1.77 per share. This compares to earnings of $0.81 per share a year ago. These figures are adjusted for non-recurring items. This quarterly report represents an earnings surprise of +5.78%. A quarter ago, it was expected that this maker of graphics chips for gaming and artificial intelligenc...
Nvidia (NVDA) came out with quarterly earnings of $1.87 per share, beating the Zacks Consensus Estimate of $1.77 per share. This compares to earnings of $0.81 per share a year ago. These figures are adjusted for non-recurring items. This quarterly report represents an earnings surprise of +5.78%. A quarter ago, it was expected that this maker of graphics chips for gaming and artificial intelligence would post earnings of $1.52 per share when it actually produced earnings of $1.62, delivering a surprise of +6.58%. Over the last four quarters, the company has surpassed consensus EPS estimates four times. Nvidia, which belongs to the Zacks Semiconductor - General industry, posted revenues of $81.62 billion for the quarter ended April 2026, surpassing the Zacks Consensus Estimate by 3.63%. This compares to year-ago revenues of $44.06 billion. The company has topped consensus revenue estimates four times over the last four quarters. The sustainability of the stock's immediate price movement based on the recently-released numbers and future earnings expectations will mostly depend on management's commentary on the earnings call. Nvidia shares have added about 18.3% since the beginning of the year versus the S&P 500's gain of 7.4%. What's Next for Nvidia? While Nvidia has outperformed the market so far this year, the question that comes to investors' minds is: what's next for the stock? There are no easy answers to this key question, but one reliable measure that can help investors address this is the company's earnings outlook. Not only does this include current consensus earnings expectations for the coming quarter(s), but also how these expectations have changed lately. Empirical research shows a strong correlation between near-term stock movements and trends in earnings estimate revisions. Investors can track such revisions by themselves or rely on a tried-and-tested rating tool like the Zacks Rank, which has an impressive track record of harnessing the power of earnin...
According to a recent SEC filing dated May 13, 2026, GlobeFlex Capital reported selling its entire stake of 250,950 shares in NCR Atleos Corporation (NYSE:NATL) during the first quarter. The estimated value of the shares sold was $10.37 million, calculated using the mean unadjusted closing price for the quarter. The quarter-end position value for this holding decreased by $9.56 million, a figure t...
According to a recent SEC filing dated May 13, 2026, GlobeFlex Capital reported selling its entire stake of 250,950 shares in NCR Atleos Corporation (NYSE:NATL) during the first quarter. The estimated value of the shares sold was $10.37 million, calculated using the mean unadjusted closing price for the quarter. The quarter-end position value for this holding decreased by $9.56 million, a figure that reflects both trading activity and market price changes. NCR Atleos delivers self-service banking technology and managed services to financial institutions and enterprise clients worldwide. NCR Atleos Corporation is a leading provider of self-directed banking and financial technology solutions, operating at a global scale with a diversified client base. The company leverages its extensive ATM network and managed service offerings to drive recurring revenue and support digital transformation for financial services providers. NCR Atleos' integrated platform and international presence position it competitively in the evolving fintech and payments landscape. Recently, GlobeFlex sold its entire stake in NCR Atleos. Investors often take note of such an action, perhaps wondering whether the asset manager sees risks that ordinary investors are overlooking– especially when it looks like the company is prospering. Continue reading
Skillsoft ( NYSE: SKIL ) on Wednesday said it appointed Ron Kisling as Chief Financial Officer, effective immediately. Kisling succeeds John Frederick, who is retiring and will remain as an adviser to the company through early September, Skillsoft said. The company said Kisling previously held CFO roles at Fastly and Fitbit . Skillsoft separately announced the sale of its Global Knowledge business...
Skillsoft ( NYSE: SKIL ) on Wednesday said it appointed Ron Kisling as Chief Financial Officer, effective immediately. Kisling succeeds John Frederick, who is retiring and will remain as an adviser to the company through early September, Skillsoft said. The company said Kisling previously held CFO roles at Fastly and Fitbit . Skillsoft separately announced the sale of its Global Knowledge business unit to an affiliate of Enduring Ventures as part of its strategic transformation efforts. Source: Press Release More on Skillsoft Skillsoft to sell Global Knowledge business to Enduring Ventures Skillsoft Non-GAAP EPS of $1.26, revenue of $131M Seeking Alpha’s Quant Rating on Skillsoft
00:00 Speaker A We are seeing a kind of a a different way of Nvidia reporting out this quarter. They marked they broke down revenue by market platform. We had data center and edge computing. That's different than maybe what they did before. What is what does this implicate to you? 00:15 Speaker B Yeah, I mean, it seems as though it's a way for them to really stand out when it comes to the data cen...
00:00 Speaker A We are seeing a kind of a a different way of Nvidia reporting out this quarter. They marked they broke down revenue by market platform. We had data center and edge computing. That's different than maybe what they did before. What is what does this implicate to you? 00:15 Speaker B Yeah, I mean, it seems as though it's a way for them to really stand out when it comes to the data center business. You know, previously they had data center and then, you know, they kind of broke that down with networking and compute. This way you could get a better understanding of what their networking business was, which by the way, they sell their networking capabilities to other companies even if they're not using Nvidia chips necessarily when it comes to the GPU or or CPU. Uh but that allowed you to kind of get a good sense of what was going on overall. 00:46 Speaker B Now they're breaking it down where the data center uh is between hyperscalers uh and then uh public clouds. So, uh they call that uh A C E, uh and those will include things like AI clouds, industrial and enterprise. And then on the flip side, they have edge computing. And so this is where you used to have things like, you know, visual, games, things like that. Now this kind of edge computing side is going to include what they say is processing devices for agentic and physical AI, including PCs, game 01:21 Speaker A As you noted, Edge computing up 29% year-over-year. Data center uh revenue up 92% year-over-year. Quite significant there. Now, as you noted, data center includes hyperscalers and AI clouds, industrial and enterprise. 01:41 Speaker A But there's so many more implications that many people are wondering, specifically about that Vera Rubin chip or if there was anything that we're going to hear about uh Jensen Wong's recent trip to China? Uh what do you what do you think? 01:54 Speaker B I mean, I think that's going to be the big question, you know, where they see kind of the China story going. ...
The S&P 500 (SNPINDEX:^GSPC) rose 1.08% to 7,432.97, the Nasdaq Composite (NASDAQINDEX:^IXIC) gained 1.54% to 26,270.36, and the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJINDICES:^DJI) advanced 1.31% to 50,009.34 as falling oil and easing yields buoyed markets. Market movers AI hardware leaders lead the gainers, with AMD and Super Micro Computer climbing on renewed confidence. Nvidia increased 1.3% ahead of...
The S&P 500 (SNPINDEX:^GSPC) rose 1.08% to 7,432.97, the Nasdaq Composite (NASDAQINDEX:^IXIC) gained 1.54% to 26,270.36, and the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJINDICES:^DJI) advanced 1.31% to 50,009.34 as falling oil and easing yields buoyed markets. Market movers AI hardware leaders lead the gainers, with AMD and Super Micro Computer climbing on renewed confidence. Nvidia increased 1.3% ahead of its post-close earnings, but the stock slipped in after-hours trading. Software bellwethers such as Salesforce and cybersecurity name CrowdStrike recovered some ground. Hasbro fell by almost 9% despite an earnings beat as the gaming company remained cautious on its full-year guidance. What this means for investors After three straight days of declines, the S&P 500 gained today on hopes that an end to the U.S.-Iran war could be in sight. WTI crude fell 5% to $99 a barrel, and 10-year Treasury yields eased. The challenge for investors is that there have been several headline-driven waves of optimism since the conflict began at the end of February, and negotiations have not yet borne fruit. Once a deal is done, it will take time for oil supplies to return to normal. Anticipation about Nvidia’s earnings dominated sentiment today as traders looked to the artificial intelligence (AI) bellwether for signs that the rally in this booming sector has further to run. The firm beat analyst estimates but the initial reaction was muted, potentially because investors had hoped for a higher sales forecast. Should you buy stock in S&P 500 Index right now? Before you buy stock in S&P 500 Index, consider this: The Motley Fool Stock Advisor analyst team just identified what they believe are the 10 best stocks for investors to buy now… and S&P 500 Index wasn’t one of them. The 10 stocks that made the cut could produce monster returns in the coming years. Consider when Netflix made this list on December 17, 2004... if you invested $1,000 at the time of our recommendation, you’d have $481,750!* O...
Good morning . Nvidia delivers, but not enough. From Japan to Jakarta, coastal capitals are flood-proofing. Tinder is taking Gen Z dating from the phone to the pickleball court. Listen to the day’s top stories . Market Snapshot Nvidia $223.47 +1.3% WTI Crude Futures $107.77 -0.8% S&P 500 Index 7,432.97 +1.1% Market data as of 05:20 PM ET. Data is subject to provider delays. Nvidia’s sales forecast...
Good morning . Nvidia delivers, but not enough. From Japan to Jakarta, coastal capitals are flood-proofing. Tinder is taking Gen Z dating from the phone to the pickleball court. Listen to the day’s top stories . Market Snapshot Nvidia $223.47 +1.3% WTI Crude Futures $107.77 -0.8% S&P 500 Index 7,432.97 +1.1% Market data as of 05:20 PM ET. Data is subject to provider delays. Nvidia’s sales forecast drew a tepid reaction from investors, adding to concerns about growing competition in the AI chip industry. Despite surging data center revenue, the $91 billion May-July outlook fell short of the Earth-shattering results investors expect. The chipmaker also dialed up shareholder rewards and announced $80 billion in stock repurchases. Separately, Anthropic’s revenue is set to double, propelling it into its first profitable quarter , a person familiar with the matter said. IPO race: SpaceX filed for a Nasdaq IPO under symbol SPCX, and reported $4.69 billion in first-quarter revenue. Here’s what to look for in its record-setting debut. OpenAI is working with Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley to make a confidential IPO filing as soon as Friday, eyeing a fall listing. Airbnb’s Chesky Says US ‘Misunderstanding’ Use of Chinese Open-Source AI Models Read more In more tech: Samsung struck an 11th-hour deal with its union to avert a May 21 strike . The tentative agreement includes a bonus system, an average wage increase of 6.2% this year and better benefits. Workers had sought a share of the company’s AI-driven gains as tech firms continue to slash workforces — most recently Intuit with a 17% reduction . As AI transforms the workplace, CEOs are becoming increasingly ruthless about employee performance. Vladimir Putin said talks with Xi Jinping were “successful, fruitful and intensive,” but the Russian president left Beijing with little progress on the Power of Siberia 2 , a key gas pipeline that could reshape global energy flows and geopolitics. Still, Putin received the Trump treat...
Building a resilient portfolio means thinking beyond a single asset or market trend. Economic cycles shift, sectors rise and fall, and no one investment performs well in every environment. That's why many investors look to diversify with platforms that provide access to real estate, fixed-income opportunities, professional financial guidance, precious metals, and even self-directed retirement acco...
Building a resilient portfolio means thinking beyond a single asset or market trend. Economic cycles shift, sectors rise and fall, and no one investment performs well in every environment. That's why many investors look to diversify with platforms that provide access to real estate, fixed-income opportunities, professional financial guidance, precious metals, and even self-directed retirement accounts. By spreading exposure across multiple asset classes, it becomes easier to manage risk, capture steady returns, and create long-term wealth that isn't tied to the fortunes of just one company or industry. Think you're saving enough for your kids? You might be dangerously off — see why Dell echoed Huang's view, saying that enterprises will deploy thousands of AI agents to boost productivity, which will require massive amounts of computing and memory resources. The Nvidia CEO predicted a future with "billions of AI agents" that will operate across industries. This future will require significant expansion in global computing capacity. According to Huang, such AI agents will need computing resources, memory and storage, which will increase demand for data centers. "We are in the beginning of the AI buildout. This is literally the very beginning of the agent at AI buildout," Huang said. He added that future AI systems will function as "digital workers" operating day and night. During the interview, Huang said the industry is currently at the initial point of what he called a decade-long AI buildout. He shared a video of Huang and Dell getting interviewed by Bloomberg. During the conversation, the tech duo indicated that the industry is moving beyond traditional semiconductor boom-and-bust cycles. Ross Gerber on Monday urged people to "pay attention" on Nvidia Corp. and Micron Technology Inc. . He said this while sharing comments from Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang and Dell Technologies Inc. CEO Michael Dell . Benzinga and Yahoo Finance LLC may earn commission or revenue on some i...
Building a resilient portfolio means thinking beyond a single asset or market trend. Economic cycles shift, sectors rise and fall, and no one investment performs well in every environment. That's why many investors look to diversify with platforms that provide access to real estate, fixed-income opportunities, professional financial guidance, precious metals, and even self-directed retirement acco...
Building a resilient portfolio means thinking beyond a single asset or market trend. Economic cycles shift, sectors rise and fall, and no one investment performs well in every environment. That's why many investors look to diversify with platforms that provide access to real estate, fixed-income opportunities, professional financial guidance, precious metals, and even self-directed retirement accounts. By spreading exposure across multiple asset classes, it becomes easier to manage risk, capture steady returns, and create long-term wealth that isn't tied to the fortunes of just one company or industry. Think you're saving enough for your kids? You might be dangerously off — see why Dell echoed Huang's view, saying that enterprises will deploy thousands of AI agents to boost productivity, which will require massive amounts of computing and memory resources. The Nvidia CEO predicted a future with "billions of AI agents" that will operate across industries. This future will require significant expansion in global computing capacity. According to Huang, such AI agents will need computing resources, memory and storage, which will increase demand for data centers. "We are in the beginning of the AI buildout. This is literally the very beginning of the agent at AI buildout," Huang said. He added that future AI systems will function as "digital workers" operating day and night. During the interview, Huang said the industry is currently at the initial point of what he called a decade-long AI buildout. He shared a video of Huang and Dell getting interviewed by Bloomberg. During the conversation, the tech duo indicated that the industry is moving beyond traditional semiconductor boom-and-bust cycles. Ross Gerber on Monday urged people to "pay attention" on Nvidia Corp. and Micron Technology Inc. . He said this while sharing comments from Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang and Dell Technologies Inc. CEO Michael Dell . Benzinga and Yahoo Finance LLC may earn commission or revenue on some i...
Rachel Reeves is to promise free summer bus rides for children and cut tariffs on some food imports, as part of a package of measures aimed at easing the costs of the Iran conflict. The chancellor will give a statement in the House of Commons on Thursday, outlining her latest plans for cushioning the blow to consumers from an expected rise in inflation later this year. The offer of free bus rides ...
Rachel Reeves is to promise free summer bus rides for children and cut tariffs on some food imports, as part of a package of measures aimed at easing the costs of the Iran conflict. The chancellor will give a statement in the House of Commons on Thursday, outlining her latest plans for cushioning the blow to consumers from an expected rise in inflation later this year. The offer of free bus rides for children aged 15 and under during August will form part of what she is calling the “Great British summer savings scheme”. Before the speech, Reeves said: “My number one priority is protecting households from rising costs. This summer I want every family to be able to enjoy themselves, that’s why we’re launching the Great British summer savings scheme, and why we’re helping kids with free bus travel throughout August.” It comes after Keir Starmer announced that the government will postpone the planned increases in fuel duty that were due to take effect in September and December, and give lorry drivers free vehicle tax. Speaking at prime minister’s questions on Wednesday, Starmer said: “We are giving our hauliers a 12-month vehicle tax holiday, helping to keep prices down, and we are backing drivers by extending the freeze in fuel duty for the rest of the year.” Duty on the red diesel used by farmers will also be cut by a third. The decision on fuel duty was criticised by thinktanks including the Resolution Foundation, which pointed out that high-income households will benefit most. Jonathan Marshall, its principal economist, said: “Come the autumn, low-income families – who are still £1,800 poorer than they were before the last energy price shock – will be worst affected by another round of rising food prices and energy bills. And yet the support announced today will primarily benefit those who are better off, with the richest fifth of households gaining more than twice as much as the poorest fifth.” View image in fullscreen The Treasury said the cost of the package for ...
When it comes to tourism, Hong Kong is recovering footfall faster than spending and officials need to realise that the two are not the same. The city’s economy grew by 5.9 per cent year on year in the first three months, its strongest quarterly performance in almost five years, according to the Census and Statistics Department’s advance estimate. Financial Secretary Paul Chan Mo-po pointed to a 17...
When it comes to tourism, Hong Kong is recovering footfall faster than spending and officials need to realise that the two are not the same. The city’s economy grew by 5.9 per cent year on year in the first three months, its strongest quarterly performance in almost five years, according to the Census and Statistics Department’s advance estimate. Financial Secretary Paul Chan Mo-po pointed to a 17 per cent rise in first-quarter visitor numbers and 5.2 per cent increase in retail and catering spending as evidence of stronger momentum. During the “golden week” holiday, Hong Kong received 1.01 million mainland visitors, 10 per cent more than last year. That is progress. It is not a return of the old tourism economy. Advertisement The same report carried a warning: spending was inconsistent . Some shopping centres reported double-digit growth, catering business in tourist areas rose by about 20 per cent, and hotel occupancy reached 90 per cent. Yet Annie Tse Yau On-yee, chairwoman of the Hong Kong Retail Management Association, said tourist consumption only benefited certain industries in traditional tourism districts, such as Tsim Sha Tsui, Mong Kok and Causeway Bay. More visitors did not translate into a broad retail revival. Tse flagged a second pattern: overnight and long-distance travellers outspent day visitors who once formed the bulk of cross-border arrivals. That is the yield economy in miniature. Fewer, deeper visits create more value than dense, shallow ones, and current headline metrics do not separate the two. Advertisement