
US equity futures are advancing alongside tech shares ahead of Nvidia’s earnings Wednesday, as investors now face a moment that demands sharper attention, warns the CEO of one of the world’s largest independent financial advisory organizations.
The move higher reflects confidence that Nvidia will once again clear a demanding hurdle.
Consensus points to another powerful set of numbers, with analysts looking for close to 55% year-on-year revenue growth and a similar surge in earnings.
The company’s new Blackwell platform, relentless spending by hyperscalers, and sovereign-level AI projects have fuelled broad optimism that Nvidia will not only beat expectations but set a stronger tone for year-end guidance.
Yet this is precisely why caution is intensifying.
Nigel Green, chief executive of global financial advisory giant deVere Group, says: “The market has priced in extraordinary strength from Nvidia.
“Expectations are steep, and the reaction will depend on whether the company proves the AI boom is still delivering expanding profitability rather than just expanding scale.”
He adds: “Investors are responding to discipline. They’re increasingly rewarding companies demonstrating control over spending, clarity of strategy and credible monetisation.
“Nvidia sits at the heart of that shift because its growth story is so closely tied to whether AI investments translate into real-time returns.”
Pressure around margins remains one of the most important variables. Nvidia has consistently delivered exceptional profitability, but the investment community will examine every detail: data-centre contribution, the pace of Blackwell adoption, the flow of orders from hyperscalers, and any commentary around tightening export rules.
A small miss in any of these areas “could change sentiment instantly, especially after one of the strongest multi-year share-price performances in modern market history,” notes Nigel Green.
Geopolitical tension is also a real factor. Washington’s technology export controls have restricted Nvidia’s ability to sell advanced chips into China, a market that previously offered meaningful growth potential, and investors will examine any update on how those rules are shaping demand.
Investors will also focus on any indication of how Nvidia is adjusting its long-term planning to the policy environment under President Donald Trump, whose administration has emphasised technology leadership, supply-chain security and strategic control over advanced computing capabilities.
Nvidia’s outlook commentary will likely carry as much weight as the numbers themselves. The market wants answers on sovereign AI contracts, inference growth, and how quickly major customers are digesting earlier Hopper orders before fully transitioning to Blackwell.
Nigel Green says: “Forecasts for another beat are widespread, but investors should not rely on momentum alone. The valuation rests on belief in durability, not just velocity.
“Nvidia must show that its leadership in AI hardware continues to expand its earnings power in a way that is sustainable.”
He continues: “The rally in equity futures reflects confidence, yet it also reflects vulnerability.
“When expectations tower over reality, even a strong quarter can fall short of what the market has imagined. Investors must look beyond the headline numbers and track the forward signals that matter.”
While Nvidia’s results will anchor market sentiment, the broader environment across AI and tech is shifting. Recent earnings from the largest players showed a widening divide between firms exercising measured, profitable investment and those stretching budgets too aggressively.
Nvidia’s performance will influence how investors judge AI-related spending across the entire sector next year.
Nigel Green concludes: “Nvidia’s earnings are now a test of conviction across global markets.
“The AI revolution continues to reshape everything around us, but investors want evidence that today’s spending becomes tomorrow’s cashflow.
“The opportunities remain substantial, yet the scrutiny is, sensibly, rising at the same pace — and nowhere more so than with Nvidia.”














