Friday, August 11th 2017

NVIDIA Announces Financial Results for Second Quarter Fiscal 2018

NVIDIA today reported record revenue for the second quarter ended July 30, 2017, of $2.23 billion, up 56 percent from $1.43 billion a year earlier, and up 15 percent from $1.94 billion in the previous quarter.
  • Record revenue of $2.23 billion, up 56 percent from a year ago
  • GAAP EPS of $0.92, up 124 percent from a year ago
  • Non-GAAP EPS of $1.01, up 91 percent from a year ago
  • Broad growth across all platforms
  • GAAP earnings per diluted share for the quarter were $0.92, up 124 percent from $0.41 a year ago and up 16 percent from $0.79 in the previous quarter. Non-GAAP earnings per diluted share were $1.01, up 91 percent from $0.53 a year earlier and up 19 percent from $0.85 in the previous quarter.
"Adoption of NVIDIA GPU computing is accelerating, driving growth across our businesses," said Jensen Huang, founder and chief executive officer of NVIDIA. "Datacenter revenue increased more than two and a half times. A growing number of car and robot-taxi companies are choosing our DRIVE PX self-driving computing platform. And in Gaming, increasingly the world's most popular form of entertainment, we power the fastest growing platforms - GeForce and Nintendo Switch.

"Nearly every industry and company is awakening to the power of AI. Our new Volta GPU, the most complex processor ever built, delivers a 100-fold speedup for deep learning beyond our best GPU of four years ago. This quarter, we shipped Volta in volume to leading AI customers. This is the era of AI, and the NVIDIA GPU has become its brain. We have incredible opportunities ahead of us," he said.

Capital Return
During the first half of fiscal 2018, NVIDIA paid $758 million in share repurchases and $166 million in cash dividends. For fiscal 2018, NVIDIA intends to return $1.25 billion to shareholders through ongoing quarterly cash dividends and share repurchases.NVIDIA will pay its next quarterly cash dividend of $0.14 per share on September 18, 2017, to all shareholders of record on August 24, 2017.

NVIDIA's outlook for the third quarter of fiscal 2018 is as follows:
  • Revenue is expected to be $2.35 billion, plus or minus two percent.
  • GAAP and non-GAAP gross margins are expected to be 58.6 percent and 58.8 percent, respectively, plus or minus 50 basis points.
  • GAAP operating expenses are expected to be approximately $672 million. Non-GAAP operating expenses are expected to be approximately $570 million.
  • GAAP other income and expense is expected to be an expense of approximately $2 million, inclusive of additional charges from early conversions of convertible notes. Non-GAAP other income and expense is expected to be nominal.
  • GAAP and non-GAAP tax rates are both expected to be 17 percent, plus or minus one percent, excluding any discrete items. GAAP discrete items include excess tax benefits or deficiencies related to stock-based compensation, which we expect to generate variability on a quarter by quarter basis.
  • Capital expenditures are expected to be approximately $65 million to $75 million.
Second Quarter Fiscal 2018 Highlights

Datacenter:
  • Announced and began shipping NVIDIA Tesla V100 GPU accelerators, the first GPU based on the new Volta architecture.
  • Unveiled new lineup of NVIDIA DGX AI supercomputers, with a large installation at Facebook.
  • Announced the NVIDIA GPU Cloud Platform, giving developers a comprehensive software suite for AI development.
  • Disclosed that the world's 13 most energy-efficient supercomputers on the Green 500 list run on NVIDIA Tesla accelerators.
  • Announced partnerships with VW and Baidu to bring AI deeper into their organizations.
Gaming:
  • Introduced Max-Q, a design approach to make gaming laptops thinner, quieter and faster.
  • Collaborated with Activision and Bungie to bring Destiny 2 to the PC for the first time.
  • Expanded GeForce Experience to China, at the ChinaJoy gaming conference.
Professional Visualization:
  • Introduced Project Holodeck, a photorealistic, collaborative VR environment.
  • Announced steps to bring AI to ray tracing to advance the iterative design process, including the launch of NVIDIA OptiX 5.0 SDK.
  • Launched NVIDIA TITAN X and NVIDIA Quadro external GPU support for the 25 million creative professionals using thin and light notebooks.
  • Released the NVIDIA VRWorks 360 Video SDK, which enables high-quality, 360-degree live stereo streaming.
Automotive:
  • Toyota selected NVIDIA DRIVE PX for its next-generation autonomous cars.
  • Volvo and Autoliv selected DRIVE PX for self-driving cars targeted to hit the market by 2021.
  • ZF and HELLA, two leading automotive suppliers, announced a system based on DRIVE PX to deliver the highest NCAP safety ratings for cars.
  • Baidu announced that its Project Apollo open-source self-driving platform for the China market will use DRIVE PX.
Edge Computing:
  • Introduced the NVIDIA Isaac robot simulator for training intelligent machines in simulated real-world conditions before deployment.
  • Announced the NVIDIA Metropolis platform, used by more than 50 partners to make cities safer and smarter by applying deep learning to video streams.
Source: NVIDIA
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33 Comments on NVIDIA Announces Financial Results for Second Quarter Fiscal 2018

#26
jabbadap
Manu_PTFunny thing about what you just said, is that it is very rude but when we analyze it you are saying the truth. That´s how bad it is lol

And we always tend to overlook the laptops market. Where are the AMD cards for those devices? They are very important on the market
Well Apple mac pros. Though I have my doubts of revenue made by those... Perf/w just is not there to be very competitive with nvidia's offerings.

How is those laptop gpus segmented anyway? If I understand it correctly oem/ip covers some of them, but are those discrete mxm gpus on gaming segment.
Posted on Reply
#27
bug
PowerPCAnd again, all about SSD's ...

Safe is what gets you killed and Intel is being killed right now just because of their monolithic product line.
Ok, you're not making any sense. How does a monolithic product line cover all these market segments: www.statista.com/statistics/495928/net-revenue-of-intel-by-segment/
What else would you expect Intel to do and who, in your view, does not have a monolithic product line?
Posted on Reply
#28
the54thvoid
Super Intoxicated Moderator
yotano211And mad angry gamers are to poor to afford such toys to mine
Don't be silly now. Don't use any form of wealth elitism to insult others. It makes you look like a turd.

If the 'miners die' comment is offensive, fight it with something more intelligent than a catch all poverty slur.

How about - "well if you're too ignorant to mine, then I'll have your cash and your cards."
Posted on Reply
#29
Manu_PT
jabbadapWell Apple mac pros. Though I have my doubts of revenue made by those... Perf/w just is not there to be very competitive with nvidia's offerings.

How is those laptop gpus segmented anyway? If I understand it correctly oem/ip covers some of them, but are those discrete mxm gpus on gaming segment.
To be honest Idk either, but the 10 series GPU are the same chips on both desktop and laptop. No idea how they are segmented tho, what I can tell you from experience "on the field" is that laptops sell tons more than desktops, at least in my country (portugal)
Posted on Reply
#30
jabbadap
Manu_PTTo be honest Idk either, but the 10 series GPU are the same chips on both desktop and laptop. No idea how they are segmented tho, what I can tell you from experience "on the field" is that laptops sell tons more than desktops, at least in my country (portugal)
Yeah, you are most probably meaning laptops sells more than desktop PCs, but not counting those who build their own ones or upgrade only graphics cards for all ready build desktops.

If I have understand that correctly they are speaking mainstream notebooks on oem/IP, thus it could be some soldered laptops/tablets(i.e. mx line). And on the other hand gtx gaming platforms on gaming segment, so mainly mxm cards on laptop space. Though there is that blurry line with soldered gtx gpus on ultrabook form factors. But maybe it is just that all gpus with gtx belongs to gaming segment and gt/mx to oem/ip.
Posted on Reply
#31
R-T-B
TheDeeGeeThank the Miners, NVIDIA...

I wish it died already... miners are selfish bastards.
That's why I sold all my mining cards for less than 50 bucks a pop when I was getting out, right? (keep in mind I could've got almost three times that, but I didn't feel it would be honest)

I was so selfish. My game giveaways are selfish too. I'm sorry, I would be generous but I mined and now I can't be.

You know what you CAN thank miners for? Pascal bios modding is finally possible because NVIDIA enabled bios signing via a webpage! I don't need to remind users how many tweaking options this enables.

gfs.nvidia.com/

Oh I'm sorry, I forgot, miners don't do anything good.

I feel like reporting this BS at this point. Miners are a pretty strong presence on this forum. Quit ripping them new ones like you know anything about what's going on or who they are as a people.
Posted on Reply
#32
BiggieShady
R-T-BI was so selfish. My game giveaways are selfish too. I'm sorry, I would be generous but I mined and now I can't be.
I don't know how are you able to sleep at nights ... you really should wash your dirty conscience more by giving me money
Posted on Reply
#33
Manu_PT
jabbadapYeah, you are most probably meaning laptops sells more than desktop PCs, but not counting those who build their own ones or upgrade only graphics cards for all ready build desktops.

If I have understand that correctly they are speaking mainstream notebooks on oem/IP, thus it could be some soldered laptops/tablets(i.e. mx line). And on the other hand gtx gaming platforms on gaming segment, so mainly mxm cards on laptop space. Though there is that blurry line with soldered gtx gpus on ultrabook form factors. But maybe it is just that all gpus with gtx belongs to gaming segment and gt/mx to oem/ip.
No! I mean laptops sell way more than pre built custom desktop PCs. (in Portugal). Idk the stats on other countries. I guess in America is the oposite as hardware is way cheaper there. Most people here can´t afford a laptop + desktop when they need a laptop for studying anyway. A GTX 1070 starts at 500€ here and a custom cooler GTX 1080ti 900€...

A GTX1050ti laptop with a i7 7700hq + 256gb ssd + 1tb HDD + 16gb DDR4 starts at 850€ here
Posted on Reply
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