Nvidia recently became the world's first $4 trillion company on the back of surging demand for its data center chips.
Many of Nvidia's top customers recently increased their data center spending forecasts, as they battle for supremacy in the artificial intelligence (AI) race.
Nvidia will release its fiscal 2026 second-quarter financial results on Aug. 27, and they could be a catalyst for further upside in its stock.
Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA) will release its financial results for its fiscal 2026 second quarter (ended July 30) on Aug. 27, which will give investors a valuable update on its booming data center business. This is where the company accounts for sales of its graphics processing units (GPUs), which are the most sought-after chips in the world for artificial intelligence (AI) development.
Some of Nvidia's biggest customers recently announced increases to their planned capital expenditures (capex) for this calendar year, as they race to build more AI data centers to meet growing demand for computing capacity. This is likely to show up in the chip giant's financial results going forward, which could be a massive tailwind for its stock price.
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Nvidia stock is already up 1,150% since the start of 2023, which is when the AI revolution really started gathering momentum. But it probably isn't too late to buy, because the upcoming earnings report on Aug. 27 could be a catalyst for further upside.
Image source: Nvidia.
Nvidia's latest Blackwell and Blackwell Ultra GPU architectures have reset the benchmark for the industry. The new Blackwell Ultra GB300 GPU can perform AI inference 50 times faster than Nvidia's previous flagship H100 chip, which is based on the older Hopper architecture. This makes the GB300 ideal for AI reasoning models like OpenAI's GPT-5, Anthropic's Claude 4, and Alphabet's Gemini 2.5.
According to Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang, reasoning models consume between 100 times and 1,000 times more tokens (words, symbols, and punctuation) than traditional large language models (LLMs), because they spend more time "thinking" in the background to produce more accurate responses.
This is driving incredible demand for the GB300, which will ship in commercial volumes during the second half of 2025. Since Nvidia's fiscal 2026 second quarter included July, investors might receive a detailed GB300 sales update on Aug. 27.
What we know right now is that some of Nvidia's top customers are ramping up their data center spending:
Nvidia's guidance suggests its Q2 revenue grew by 50% year over year, to $45 billion. Based on previous quarters, its data center business is likely to have accounted for almost 90% of that figure, thanks to surging GPU sales.
Wall Street will be eyeing Nvidia's revenue guidance for the third quarter, which is currently underway, because it will reflect the level of demand for its Blackwell and Blackwell Ultra chips. Analysts are looking for a forecast of $52.5 billion (according to Yahoo! Finance), so anything above that will probably be very bullish for Nvidia stock.
At the bottom line, Wall Street's consensus estimate suggests Nvidia delivered earnings of $1 per share during Q2. Earnings typically drive stock prices, so if the official number beats that on Aug. 27, it will be great news for shareholders.
Nvidia stock is up 35% since it reported its financial results for the fiscal 2026 first quarter on May 28, which could be a sign of things to come if its Q2 report meets or exceeds expectations.
The stock is trading at a price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio of 58.7 as I write this, which is a slight discount to its 10-year average of 60.1, so it's close to fair value. However, Wall Street thinks Nvidia will generate earnings of $4.33 per share during fiscal 2026 overall, placing its stock at a forward P/E ratio of just 42.
That means Nvidia stock would have to climb by 43% over the next six months or so just to trade in line with its 10-year average P/E ratio of 60.1.
NVDA PE Ratio data by YCharts
Therefore, as long as Nvidia's financial results meet analysts' expectations, its stock could be destined for upside following its Aug. 27 report. Since we know many of the company's top customers have increased their capex forecasts, I think the risk that its Q2 results fall short of estimates is very low, so the stock could be a solid buy right now.
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Anthony Di Pizio has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Alphabet, Amazon, Meta Platforms, Microsoft, and Nvidia. The Motley Fool recommends the following options: long January 2026 $395 calls on Microsoft and short January 2026 $405 calls on Microsoft. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.