Nvidia Q4 FY26 net income soars 94% to $42.96bn

Summary:
  • Nvidia shattered expectations with a 94% soar in net income to $42.96bn, proving the AI industrial revolution is accelerating, not slowing.
  • CEO Jensen Huang officially declared the "Agentic AI inflection point" has arrived, transitioning the world from simple chatbots to autonomous enterprise "factories".
  • Despite a record $68.1bn in revenue and a massive $78bn guidance, Nvidia’s stock is fighting a dystopian "AI fears" narrative that is currently decoupling hardware success from software stability.

Nvidia Q4 FY26 Earnings: Record Revenue, Explosive Profit Growth, and AI Market Anxiety

Nvidia (NVDA) shattered expectations yesterday, reporting a 94% surge in net income to $42.96bn for Q4 FY26. Despite record revenue of $68.1bn and a bullish Q1 FY27 forecast of $78bn, the stock remained flat as the market grappled with “AI Destabilization” fears. While CEO Jensen Huang insists the “agentic AI inflection point” will empower software firms, investors are currently wary of the massive capital outflows from Big Tech into Nvidia’s coffers.

For a detailed breakdown of Nvidia’s 47x P/E valuation and why hyperscaler $700 billion capex plans might actually be a long-term threat to the stock, see my colleague Michael Abadha’s analysis here.

Nvidia Q4 FY26 Financial Breakdown: Revenue, Net Income, Margins, and Data Center Dominance

Nvidia has reached a scale where it now generates more revenue in a single quarter than most chip competitors do in a year. The fourth quarter, which ended January 25, 2026, showcased a company firing on all cylinders across nearly every segment. As reported by Verdict.co.uk, the financial velocity of the firm has reached a near-vertical trajectory.

MetricQ4 FY26 ResultYear-over-Year (YoY)
Total Revenue$68.1bn▲ 73%
Net Income$42.96bn▲ 94%
Data Centre Revenue$62.3bn▲ 75%
GAAP Gross Margin75.0%Strong
GAAP EPS (Diluted)$1.76Record

For the full fiscal year 2026, Nvidia reported a staggering $215.9bn in revenue, a 65% increase from the prior year. This growth was underpinned by record-breaking demand in the data centre segment, which remains the company’s primary engine, accounting for over 91% of quarterly revenue.

Why Nvidia Stock Didn’t Rally After Earnings: Wall Street Fears of AI Capital Spending and Valuation Risk

Despite the “huge numbers,” the sentiment on Wall Street is turning cold. As Dan Gallagher pointed out in the Wall Street Journal, Nvidia now makes more revenue in a single quarter than most chip companies generate in a year, but “in a turbulent market awash in a new class of AI fears, that’s no longer enough.”

The primary fear is Destabilization. Nvidia’s runaway success is being fueled by the massive capital spending (Capex) of its own customers, Big Tech giants like Microsoft, Amazon, and Alphabet. However, this is a zero-sum game in the eyes of many investors.

While Nvidia’s coffers are full, these giants are seeing their Free Cash Flow decline. Microsoft is down 17% this year; Amazon is down 9%. Investors are starting to view Nvidia’s margins as a “tax” on the rest of the tech industry, leading to a dystopian view of the effects of AI on global employment and software valuations.

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Jensen Huang on Agentic AI: Why Nvidia Says the Software Sector Is Not Being Disrupted

Jensen Huang is fully aware of this “destabilization” narrative. In a high-stakes interview with CNBC following the earnings call, he addressed the software bloodbath directly, stating that “the markets got it wrong.” Huang’s core argument is that the “Agentic AI inflection point” has arrived. He views AI not as a replacement for software giants like Adobe, SAP, or ServiceNow, but as a “tool user.” He explained that these platforms exist for fundamentally good reasons, and the next wave of growth will come from autonomous agents using these existing tools on our behalf to skyrocketing productivity.

To anchor this leadership, Nvidia unveiled the Rubin platform during the quarter. Rubin isn’t just a faster chip; it’s a mission to bring “an order-of-magnitude lower cost per token.” By lowering the cost of inference, Nvidia is attempting to make AI deployment so cheap that it becomes impossible for enterprises not to use it, thereby reigniting the software sector it is currently accused of disrupting.

Nvidia’s Strategic Partnerships: How Meta, AWS, and Sovereign AI Expand Its Competitive Moat

Nvidia’s dominance is further cemented by its ecosystem. The quarter saw the launch of the NVIDIA BlueField-4 data processor and the Nemotron 3 open AI models. Most importantly, the company expanded partnerships with Meta, AWS, Anthropic, and Infosys.

Specifically, the multiyear partnership with Meta will see the social media giant deploy millions of Blackwell and Rubin GPUs to develop hyperscale data centers. This isn’t just about hardware sales; it’s about embedding Nvidia’s Spectrum-X switches and CUDA software into the very nervous system of the internet. Even as the company projects zero data centre revenue from China due to export restrictions, the aggressive expansion into “Sovereign AI” factories in the West and India (via the Infosys tie-up) is filling that gap.

Can Nvidia Sustain 75% Gross Margins? Analyst Debate on Peak AI Profitability

The most controversial part of the Q4 report was the gross margin. At 75.2% (non-GAAP), Nvidia is operating at a level usually reserved for high-end software companies, not hardware manufacturers.

Critics argue that these margins are unsustainable and represent a “peak AI” moment. However, with Q1 FY27 guidance set at $78 billion, Nvidia is signaling that the “Industrial Revolution” Huang speaks of is still in its early innings. If Nvidia can keep the Vera Rubin chips ahead of competitors like AMD and custom silicon from cloud providers, they may hold these margins longer than the bears anticipate.

Is Nvidia still growing in China?

No. Nvidia officially stated they expect zero data centre compute revenue from China in their next outlook due to ongoing trade restrictions.

What is the Rubin Platform?

Announced in Q4 FY26, Rubin is Nvidia’s next-generation AI platform designed to succeed Blackwell, focusing on drastically reducing the cost of AI inference.

Why did the stock price stay flat after such a big beat?

Markets are currently pricing in “AI fatigue” and fears that Big Tech cannot sustain the current levels of capital expenditure without seeing a clear return on investment (ROI) in their own software products.