Monday, August 8th 2022

NVIDIA Announces Preliminary Financial Results for Second Quarter Fiscal 2023, Gaming $$ Down 44%

NVIDIA (NASDAQ: NVDA) today announced selected preliminary financial results for the second quarter ended July 31, 2022. Second quarter revenue is expected to be approximately $6.70 billion, down 19% sequentially and up 3% from the prior year, primarily reflecting weaker than forecasted Gaming revenue. Gaming revenue was $2.04 billion, down 44% sequentially and down 33% from the prior year. Data Center revenue was $3.81 billion, up 1% sequentially and up 61% from the prior year.

The shortfall relative to the May revenue outlook of $8.10 billion was primarily attributable to lower sell-in of Gaming products reflecting a reduction in channel partner sales likely due to macroeconomic headwinds. In addition to reducing sell-in, the company implemented pricing programs with channel partners to reflect challenging market conditions that are expected to persist into the third quarter.
Data Center revenue, though a record, was somewhat short of the company's expectations, as it was impacted by supply chain disruptions. Second quarter results are expected to include approximately $1.32 billion of charges, primarily for inventory and related reserves, based on revised expectations of future demand.

"Our gaming product sell-through projections declined significantly as the quarter progressed," said Jensen Huang, founder and CEO of NVIDIA. "As we expect the macroeconomic conditions affecting sell-through to continue, we took actions with our Gaming partners to adjust channel prices and inventory.

"NVIDIA has excellent products and position driving large and growing markets. As we navigate these challenges, we remain focused on the once-in-a-generation opportunity to reinvent computing for the era of AI," he said.

"The significant charges incurred in the quarter reflect previous long-term purchase commitments we made during a time of severe component shortages and our current expectation of ongoing macroeconomic uncertainty," said Colette Kress, EVP and CFO of NVIDIA.

"We believe our long-term gross margin profile is intact. We have slowed operating expense growth, balancing investments for long-term growth while managing near-term profitability. We plan to continue stock buybacks as we foresee strong cash generation and future growth," she said.

The preliminary results for the second quarter ended July 31, 2022, are an estimate, based on information available to management as of the date of this release, and are subject to further changes upon completion of the company's standard quarter and year-end closing procedures. This update does not present all necessary information for an understanding of NVIDIA's financial condition as of the date of this release, or its results of operations for the second quarter. As NVIDIA completes its quarter-end financial close process and finalizes its financial statements for the quarter, it will be required to make significant judgments in a number of areas. It is possible that NVIDIA may identify items that require it to make adjustments to the preliminary financial information set forth above and those changes could be material. NVIDIA does not intend to update such financial information prior to release of its final second quarter financial statement information, which is currently scheduled for Aug. 24, 2022.
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46 Comments on NVIDIA Announces Preliminary Financial Results for Second Quarter Fiscal 2023, Gaming $$ Down 44%

#26
Sabotaged_Enigma
What great news! Glad to see it backfires finally. Go on Huang.
Let's see who's gonna laugh and who's gonna cry when RX 7000 series and RTX 40 series roll out. The way I see it, somebody's gonna cry hard for building a heater. Probably this time he won't carry the card out of an oven because the card itself could bake something to eat.
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#27
_Flare
sadly all numbers show that MSRP seems only possible if there is at least a little bit overcapacity ... otherwise the consumerprices explode.
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#28
maxfly
I love how there is absolutely ZERO mention of crypto in the entire million word release. Gotta play that investor game.

Gamers have looong memories leather jacket boy. The burn is likely juuust begining.
;)
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#29
mahirzukic2
Razrback16And I am totally cool with that. Happy to just buy 2nd and even 3rd hand if I have to. Not paying the ridiculous prices they are asking and I suspect many are in the same boat with me given the #s here.
I was just gonna say that. We will buy 2nd hand gfx cards? So be it.
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#30
Recus
GarrusFirst of all the Switch SoC is almost a 10 year old cellphone chip basically, nVidia is not making money there selling them for a few dollars each. Secondly you seemingly missed that AMD on average profits more than 2 to 1 because of volume and higher pricing. That's because Sony AND Microsoft use AMD, both. The home console market is much larger than the portable market (Sony and Microsoft usually sell twice as much as Nintendo before the shortage of PS5s etc). Even now, 450,000 home consoles sold every week versus 300,000 portables. And there is tons of supply that is on the shelves unsold for Nintendo and sales are dropping fast, meanwhile console sales are supply limited.

Your take is the opposite of reality.
I wonder where AMD includes these shenanigans?

videocardz.com/newz/amd-is-selling-broken-playstation-5-apus-to-cryptominers
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#31
trsttte
Vayra86Nintendo is another prime example that graphics don't matter much :)
Yeah, but it's more than that. The nintendo brand and the few pieces of IP they actively explore (and enforce with an iron fist along with everything else that's sitting still in the vault) sells pretty well. It's beyond graphics not mattering imo, by my count about half the releases are old ports/remasters that run pretty poorly but the convenience of having them on a cute handheld with the Nintendo badge sells.
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#32
InVasMani
cvaldesNo, NVIDIA has better machine learning technology than AMD for deep learning operations.

NVIDIA also has the BlueField DPU, derived from technologies acquired from Mellanox back in 2019. They are working on a datacenter CPU codenamed Grace for anticipated release in 2023.

Remember that NVIDIA is much more than GeForce.
That's probably a more complicated statement to say today with Xilinx acquisition. I'm pretty sure AMD's doing pretty well from that as well.
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#33
Easo
mechtechCompared to pre-covid those are Record Profits though.
"Problem" with that is the required endless growth insanity which I am sure you have heard about.
Of course the NVidia is doing great by any rational logic.
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#34
cosminmcm
This is great news, actually! Stop trying to scam customers. Be real and you will have good results.
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#35
MentalAcetylide
Well, in the end, Jensen Huang will still be able to wear is leather jackets. Hell, he might even go for an upgrade, although I don't know what comes after leather in regards to expense & animal skins. Sharkskin leather maybe? Afterall, he's the shark and our money is the target. :shadedshu:
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#36
trsttte
InVasManiThat's probably a more complicated statement to say today with Xilinx acquisition. I'm pretty sure AMD's doing pretty well from that as well.
Even without taking AMD into account it's very complicated when so much of this is heavely closed and proprietary. Even google has their hands in it (though with smaller devices afaik) and a lot of other solutions exist on the market.
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#37
PapaTaipei
I wonder why the GPU makers don't make a huge CPU+GPU chiplet. The fact that everything is closer would mean better bandwidth, probably because of heat?
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#40
medi01
qcmadnessNVIDIA bought AMD Epyc systems with ram and SSD and then packages with their own card and sells for high prices.
True, but lion's share of those systems (that cost 200k) is GPUs.
cvaldesNo, NVIDIA has better machine learning technology than AMD for deep learning operations.
No, not at all.

Those GPUs are dumb, massively parallel number cruncherss.

NV was simply the first to enter the market, while AMD was having bouquet of Raja embarrassment and those RX 480s. CUDA helps too.

Nevertheless, the solo party is over for NV in that segment too.
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#41
stimpy88
Is this the part when nGreedia suddenly remembers that they are "for the gamers" again?
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#43
64K
imo graphics cards are still too high although they have come way down in price. The way that I deal with it is to not buy especially considering we are near the end of this generation. Instead I play games from the 90s to the mid 2000s and my 2070 Super is way overkill for that. I like the older games so I'm not suffering any hardship at all. I will buy a card from the next generation and do a new build and then go back to playing newer games.
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#44
ppn
They haven't deep learned anything yet. If sales drop by 33%, they need to lower all the prices by 33%. not just the 3090. and all the rest still cost as much as the tier above. 3050 still priced at 3060 MSRP, 3060 priced at 3060 Ti MSRP and so on. AT least get one step below, next gen is 3-tiers up. 4060 Ti is the 3080 replacement. So if we buy one now we get royally screwd. What a great deal.
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#45
Vayra86
trsttteYeah, but it's more than that. The nintendo brand and the few pieces of IP they actively explore (and enforce with an iron fist along with everything else that's sitting still in the vault) sells pretty well. It's beyond graphics not mattering imo, by my count about half the releases are old ports/remasters that run pretty poorly but the convenience of having them on a cute handheld with the Nintendo badge sells.
I think Nintendo established archetype ish versions of games and target groups of consumers. Mario for the platformer, Zelda for action rpg, Mario Kart for racing. It has it all in its very own flavor and great execution. The badge is earned. Their IP still works after all this time, and thats quite unique in gaming. Look at our criticism on so many sequels like AC, Far Cry, CoD... its nowhere near as iconic, has to reinvent itself to keep 'current'. Gameplay is hit/miss affair.
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