Is Beating Expectations Not Enough? Why Nvidia Stock Still Cannot Escape the "Post-Earnings Pullback" Curse?

Source Tradingkey

TradingKey - NVIDIA ( NVDA) remains the most core play for positioning in AI infrastructure, but the market's pricing logic for the stock has quietly shifted.

Although the Q1 earnings report released after hours on May 21 once again significantly beat market expectations—with revenue at $81.6 billion and Data Center revenue at $75.2 billion, both well above Wall Street consensus—and the company announced an $80 billion buyback plan alongside a dividend hike, the share price instead dropped 1.26% in after-hours trading, continuing the anomalous trend of "strong earnings followed by a pullback."

Looking back, NVIDIA has delivered earnings beats multiple times without boosting its stock price; it fell 5.5% on its earnings day in February 2026 and saw a 3.2% correction the following day in November 2025, both reflecting a "sell-the-news" market reaction.

In terms of revenue scale, it is no small feat for NVIDIA to achieve growth exceeding expectations given its extremely high base. However, the market's measurement standard has diverged from that of ordinary blue-chip tech stocks; several consecutive quarters of significant beats have instilled a "must significantly outperform" trading inertia among investors.

Consequently, the key to this earnings report was not "whether it beat expectations," but rather "whether the magnitude of the beat could support the current valuation and previous gains." The Q1 data did not significantly upwardly revise short-term growth slope expectations, serving as a major catalyst for after-hours selling pressure.

When a company trades at a $5.4 trillion market capitalization and a 45.1x P/E ratio, "meeting expectations" is no longer enough to satisfy capital demands. Even if the data exceeds expectations, it may still be interpreted as "not good enough" if it fails to continuously reshape the growth narrative.

Additionally, maneuvering in the options market further intensified short-term pressure on the stock price. This week's NVIDIA options chain showed a large concentration of short-term call options with strike prices in the $225-$230 range nearing expiration; retail investors bet on new highs, while market makers suppressed volatility through dynamic hedging strategies.

In a high-gamma environment, dealers tend to sell when the stock rallies and buy when it falls, creating a "pinning" effect on the share price and accelerating the decay of option time value. It is estimated that over $100 million in premiums may have shifted from buyers to sellers in the options market this week, further limiting the upside for the stock.

Meanwhile, investors have begun to look past the stellar figures to scrutinize potential concerns: Will there be a demand air pocket during the transition from the Blackwell architecture to the Rubin architecture? Could $95 billion in non-cancelable purchase obligations trigger a cash-flow crisis if AI demand cools? Will a slowdown in capital expenditure growth from cloud providers ripple through to upstream chip demand? These long-term worries are amplified by high valuations, meaning any signal that fails to meet peak optimism could spark a sell-off.

High expectations themselves are becoming the most difficult to quantify yet most tangible risk. Bloomberg consensus has anchored NVIDIA's FY2027 revenue at over $370 billion, implying the company must maintain a high-level quarterly year-over-year growth rate of around 70%, leaving almost no room for any unexpected disruptions.

Disclaimer: For information purposes only. Past performance is not indicative of future results.
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