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There was a lot to like when NVIDIA (NASDAQ: NVDA) reported financial results for its just completed first quarter. While the numbers were stellar by most accounts, the slowing growth in the company's data center segment gave investors pause.
Revenue jumped to $3.2 billion, up 66% year over year, while adjusted earnings per share grew to $2.05, up 141% over the prior-year quarter. These results blew past analysts' consensus estimates for earnings per share of $1.65 on revenue of $2.91 billion.
While NVIDIA reported all the usual numbers in its earnings release, the company provided much more color during the conference call with analysts to discuss the results. Read on to find out what NVIDIA management had to say about the battle royale trend, cryptocurrency, and self-driving cars.
NVIDIA's founder and CEO Jen-Hsun Huang. Image source: NVIDIA.
The battle royale phenomenon
Gamers everywhere are going gaga over the battle royale format. Fortnite: Battle Royale is the latest gaming craze to capture the public imagination. The format involves up to 100 gamers battling it out in a Hunger Games-style match, with the last person standing crowned the winner. A similar game, PlayerUnknown's Battlegrounds (referred to as PUBG) is also making the rounds.
When asked about the unexpected strength in what is typically a seasonally slower quarter in the gaming business, NVIDIA's founder and CEO Jen-Hsun Huang pointed to the craze:
As you probably know, Fortnite and PUBG are global phenomena. The success of Fortnite and PUBG are just beyond comprehension, really. Those two games are a combination of Hunger Games and Survivor [and have] just captured imaginations of gamers all over the world. And we saw the uptick and we saw the demand on our GPUs from all over the world.
He went on to say that he believes that is still pent-up demand due to the increasing popularity of those titles, and the company will be working to capitalize on that in the coming quarters.
Expect a crypto collapse
The rapid rise in cryptocurrency and the increasing demand for GPUs to mine the digital currencies has reduced the supply of NVIDIA graphics cards available for gamers. Huang said, "Crypto miners bought a lot of our GPUs during the quarter, and it drove prices up ... and so we're starting to see prices come down. We monitor spot pricing every single day around the world. And the prices are starting to normalize."
NVIDIA even took steps to market crypto-specific GPUs directly to miners. The cryptocurrency boom has provided a boost to NVIDIA's results in recent quarters, but the extent of that effect was unclear.