Original Author: Long Yue
Original Source: Wall Street News
NVIDIA earnings season—the most important thing is no longer the numbers themselves.
On May 18, Bank of America Securities analyst Vivek Arya's team released a preview report for NVIDIA's Q1 earnings, which will be announced after the U.S. market close on Wednesday, May 20.
According to NVIDIA's historical pattern over the past ten quarters, actual revenue has averaged 7% to 8% above management guidance. Management previously provided F1Q27 revenue guidance of $78 billion. Based on this calculation, actual revenue is highly likely to fall in the range of $83 billion to $84 billion, while the current market consensus is only $78.7 billion.
In other words, 'beating expectations' is almost a foregone conclusion. But analysts believe what will truly move the market's nerve after the earnings release are the following five questions.
Cash Return: Can NVIDIA Change Its 'Stinginess'?
This is the most discussed topic in the report and is considered by them to be the core reason for NVIDIA's long-term valuation discount.
NVIDIA is currently the largest company by market cap in the S&P 500, accounting for a high weight of 8.3% in the index, exceeding the historical peaks of Apple (7.9%) and Microsoft (7.2%). However, the problem is that NVIDIA's shareholder return efforts are severely mismatched with its size.
The data is straightforward: from 2022 to 2025, NVIDIA's free cash flow payout ratio (dividends + buybacks) averaged only 47%, while the average for comparable peers in the same period was 80%. Even NVIDIA's own average over the previous ten years was 80%.
Meanwhile, NVIDIA's current dividend yield is only 0.02%, while the peer average is 0.89%. Among equity income funds, NVIDIA is held by only 16% of funds, while Microsoft is held by 57% and Apple by 32%.
Where is the money going? Analysts point out that NVIDIA is investing heavily in the ecosystem—OpenAI, Anthropic, technology partners. These investments are seen as controversial by some outsiders, with voices suggesting it's "round-trip financing"—NVIDIA lends money to customers, who then use that money to buy NVIDIA's chips.
How large is the valuation discount? Data shows that NVIDIA's forward P/E ratio for 2026/2027 is 26x/19x, while the mean for other 'Magnificent Seven' members is 49x/42x, representing a discount of nearly 50%.
A more specific comparison: analysts predict NVIDIA's combined free cash flow for 2026+2027 will exceed $430 billion, higher than the combined ~$375 billion for Apple and Microsoft. However, NVIDIA's market cap is approximately $5.46 trillion, about 28% lower than the combined $7.5 trillion for Apple and Microsoft.
Analysts believe that if NVIDIA increases its dividend and buyback efforts, it could attract more long-term funds that prefer income, narrowing the valuation discount while also dispelling concerns about "round-trip financing." They list this change as a "potential catalyst for the second half of the year."
Vera Rubin: When Will the Next-Generation Chip Arrive?
NVIDIA's current main products are the Blackwell series. The market is concerned: when will the next-generation Vera Rubin platform officially ramp up?
The bank's judgment is the second half of 2026. Vera Rubin (codenamed R200) uses TSMC's 3nm process and shares the "Oberon" rack architecture with Blackwell Ultra, making the product transition relatively smooth, with limited expected impact on gross margins.
Looking further ahead, Vera Rubin Ultra (codenamed VR300) will be launched in the second half of 2027, featuring a completely new "Kyber" rack architecture, while the cost proportion of High Bandwidth Memory (HBM) will also further increase.
The market also wants to hear NVIDIA's latest stance on the "trillion-dollar revenue forecast" during the earnings call—NVIDIA previously gave an outlook for cumulative revenue of $1 trillion from 2025 to 2027, but contributions from LPU (Language Processing Unit) racks, CPUs, and Vera Rubin Ultra have not yet been included. Will this be updated this time?
Gross Margin: Can the 75% Defense Line Hold?
Gross margin is one of the core supports of NVIDIA's valuation.
Analysts judge: in the short term, because Vera Rubin reuses Blackwell's rack architecture, gross margins are relatively stable during the product transition period. However, in the medium to long term, the rising proportion of HBM memory costs is a persistent pressure source.
Market consensus shows NVIDIA's gross margin fluctuating within the 74% to 75% range. The bank has no disagreement with this but emphasizes that any better-than-expected gross margin performance will be a positive catalyst.
How Will the AI Accelerator Market Size Forecast Be Updated?
Bank of America previously provided NVIDIA's "trillion-dollar" prediction framework for the AI market from 2025 to 2027. This earnings report, the market is focused on whether NVIDIA will update this forecast, especially by incorporating three new growth drivers previously not counted:
- LPU (Language Processing Unit) racks
- Vera CPU (NVIDIA's self-developed server CPU)
- Vera Rubin Ultra
The bank expects that by 2030, the overall AI accelerator market size will reach approximately $1.17 trillion, with NVIDIA maintaining about 68% to 70% market share.
Specifically, NVIDIA's AI accelerator revenue is expected to grow from $102.2 billion in 2024 to $800 billion in 2030, AMD from $5 billion to $80.1 billion over the same period, and Broadcom from $9.3 billion to $181.9 billion.
Is the Competitive Threat from Google TPU and CPU Exaggerated?
A narrative has been circulating in the market recently: as AI enters the "Agentic AI" era, the importance of CPUs will surpass that of GPUs, thus threatening NVIDIA's moat.
The bank clearly disagrees with this, providing two reasons:
First, NVIDIA's self-developed "Vera CPU" will have new progress disclosed at the upcoming Computex conference, and its competitiveness in the standalone CPU market should not be underestimated.
Second, in already large-scale deployments of Blackwell and TPU clusters, the CPU-to-GPU ratio is already 1:2, which does not align with the narrative that "Agentic AI requires more CPUs."
The conclusion is: while the CPU market is large, there are many competitors (with strong contenders in both x86 and ARM architectures). NVIDIA's dominant position in the GPU/AI accelerator field is difficult to shake in the short term. It is estimated that by 2030, NVIDIA will maintain approximately 70% revenue share in a total addressable AI market exceeding $1.7 trillion.
Valuation: A 'Tech Leader' at a 50% Discount
Finally, back to valuation. The report uses a set of data to directly highlight NVIDIA's current valuation paradox.
Based on CY26/27 forward P/E ratios, NVIDIA is at 26x/19x, while the "Magnificent Seven" (Mag-7) average is 49x/42x—NVIDIA is at a nearly 50% discount.
Based on EV/FCF (Enterprise Value/Free Cash Flow), NVIDIA is at 28x/20x, while the Mag-7 average is 83x/59x—a discount exceeding 66%.
Based on PEG (Price/Earnings to Growth ratio), NVIDIA is at 0.41x, while the Mag-7 average is 2.61x, and the S&P 500 overall is above 1.3x.
Bank of America maintains a "Buy" rating with a price target of $320, based on a CY27 forward P/E ratio of 28x (excluding cash), which is at the mid-to-low end of NVIDIA's historical valuation range of 25x to 56x.











