Want to Know What's Next for Nvidia? Look at This 1 Key Number.

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Business has exploded for Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA) over the past few years, with revenue surging in the triple digits quarter after quarter, and reaching record levels well into the billions of dollars. This is thanks to the company's position in one of today's highest-growth markets: artificial intelligence (AI). Nvidia dominates the AI chip market, with 80% share, and also has built an AI empire, selling a wide variety of related products and services to customers.

And that's helped the stock to skyrocket, gaining 2,400% over the past five years and heading for an annual increase of about 180%. Now, against this backdrop, Nvidia has reached a transition point. Its pace of revenue growth slowed in the recent quarter, and the company is beginning to launch a key product. Investors are carefully watching and wondering if Nvidia, following this big moment, will keep up its momentum or if it's settling into a phase of slower growth. Want to know what's next for this AI giant? A look at one key number could offer us some clues.

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An AI powered robotic hand and a human hand touch.
Image source: Getty Images.

A key part of AI programs

First, let's check out Nvidia's path so far, including the recent slowdown. Nvidia's graphics processing units (GPUs) have emerged as the fastest on the market, making them a key part of AI programs, and this has resulted in major demand from the world's biggest tech companies.

Players like Meta Platforms, eager to supercharge AI programs, and Amazon, aiming to offer the world's best AI tools to customers through its Amazon Web Services business, have flocked to Nvidia for its products in recent years. And this has translated into soaring demand for the company's newest offering, the Blackwell architecture and chip. Nvidia called demand "staggering" in its recent earnings call and has said it surpasses supply.

In spite of all of this, Nvidia's revenue growth slowed in the recent quarter, shifting to double-digit growth from the triple-digit growth we've seen in previous quarters. Before worrying though, it's important to take a look at the actual revenue figures, and here, we can see that comparison quarters have become very difficult. Considering demand for Nvidia's products at the earlier stages of the AI boom, it was "easy" for the company to increase revenue in the triple digits in the second quarter of the 2024 fiscal year, for example, from the level of about $6 billion in the year-earlier period. Today, it's more difficult to do this with quarterly revenue topping $35 billion. So, I wouldn't look at this revenue trend as a sign of a slowdown at Nvidia.