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Nvidia Forecast Signals Faster Growth as Vera Rubin Launches
Nvidia just reported its 11th straight quarter of revenue growth above 55% as the leading tech names keep snapping up the company’s AI chips. Already the world’s most valuable public company, growth is now reaccelerating.
In its earnings report Wednesday, Nvidia said year-over-year revenue will surge about 77% this quarter to roughly $78 billion. That would mark the fastest growth rate for any period since the quarter ending January 2025, when expansion came in slightly higher at 78%. Its forecast sailed past the $72.6 billion average analyst estimate, according to LSEG.
Revenue in the fourth quarter jumped 73%, also topping estimates, following expansion of 62% in the prior period. The data center business, home to Nvidia’s AI graphics processing units, now accounts for over 91% of sales.
The chipmaker’s optimistic outlook comes as the company ramps production of Vera Rubin, its next rack-scale system for AI that will succeed Grace Blackwell. Nvidia says the system’s 72 next-generation Rubin graphics processing units (GPUs) are expected to deliver 10 times more performance per watt, compared to their predecessors.
Finance chief Colette Kress said on the earnings call after the report that the company shipped its “first Vera Rubin samples to customers earlier this week,” and that Nvidia expects every model builder and cloud provider to eventually deploy the system. She said the company now expects growth this year to exceed what was included in the company’s projection last year for a $500 billion revenue opportunity between Blackwell and Rubin.
“We believe we have inventory and supply commitments in place to address future demand, including shipments extending into calendar 2027,” Kress said.
Nvidia’s shares were little changed in extended trading after initially popping, reflecting investors’ lofty expectations for the company, which is valued at almost $5 trillion thanks to its dominance in AI processors.
There’s competition on the horizon, as smaller rival Advanced Micro Devices is set to release Helios, its first rack-scale system for AI, later this year. Earlier this week, Meta committed to deploying up to 6 gigawatts of AMD GPUs, with Helios shipments starting in 2026.
Nvidia also faces challenges from some of its biggest customers — namely Amazon and Google — making in-house AI chips to power their data centers. In its annual filing, Nvidia said a potential risk to future results is that “customers develop their own internal solution.”
Looking beyond fiscal 2027, growth is expected to slow dramatically, from 63% this year to 30%, 11.5% and 3% in the three subsequent years, according to LSEG.
‘Compute equals revenue’
But for now, Nvidia’s growth is far outpacing any of its competitors or peers as tech giants and AI model developers race to build out their infrastructure to meet soaring demand.
“In this new world of AI, compute equals revenues,” CEO Jensen Huang said on Wednesday’s earnings call. He repeated the phrase and variations of it several times during the call, in reference to the speedy adoption of agentic AI, which goes beyond early generative AI by allowing businesses to create and run applications with text prompts.
Anthropic’s Claude Cowork has quickly taken off in the enterprise by plugging into more applications. And earlier this month, OpenAI hired OpenClaw developer Peter Steinberger after his tool surged in popularity by automating tasks such as managing emails and calendars, browsing the web and interacting with online services.
“Between Claude Cowork and OpenClaw, compute demand is skyrocketing, and the ChatGPT moment of agentic AI has arrived,” Huang said on the call.
Not included in Nvidia’s first-quarter forecast is any potential data center revenue from China. A lack of clarity around export controls has kept Nvidia from selling into the world’s second-largest economy, even after President Donald Trump said in January that his administration would approve China sales of Nvidia’s H200 chip, with the U.S. government taking 25% of sales.
Huang said in May that China’s AI market would likely reach about $50 billion within two to three years, and that missing out on it would be a “tremendous loss.” It’s an opportunity that hasn’t yet opened up.
“While small amounts of H200 products for China-based customers were approved by the U.S. government, we have yet to generate any revenue and we do not know whether any imports will be allowed into China,” Kress said on the call. “We are not assuming any data center compute revenue from China in our outlook.”
CNBC
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Dubai gold rises for a third day after its worst month since 2008.
Dubai gold prices moved higher early Wednesday, extending a short-term rebound after a sharp correction through March that unsettled buyers and traders alike.
At 8:22 am, 24K gold stood at Dh566.75, up from Dh563.25 a day earlier, while 22K rose to Dh525 from Dh521.50. (Check latest UAE gold prices here, alongside prices in Saudi Arabia, Oman, Qatar, Bahrain, Kuwait, and India.)
The uptick follows a volatile month where prices dropped nearly 12%, marking the steepest monthly decline since October 2008. That slide has reset expectations across the market, with buyers returning in phases rather than rushing in.
Peak to pullback
Gold had surged to levels above $4,700 an ounce in recent sessions, recovering from a broad sell-off triggered by rising US Treasury yields and a stronger dollar.
The shift in direction reflects a wider change in market positioning. Investors who once turned to gold for protection during geopolitical stress instead moved toward yield-bearing assets, particularly as expectations of interest rate cuts faded.
Ahmad Assiri, Research Strategist at Pepperstone, said gold’s behaviour through March marked a clear break from its traditional role.
He added that rising yields and a stronger dollar “forced a painful downside repricing of the yellow metal,” with investors moving away from expectations of monetary easing and pricing in tighter conditions.
War outlook shifts sentiment
Recent gains have been supported by signs that tensions in the Middle East may ease, with market attention shifting from immediate conflict risks to longer-term economic implications.
Comments from US President Donald Trump suggesting a potential resolution within weeks have lifted equities and softened the dollar, creating space for gold to stabilise.
Bond traders have also reduced bets on aggressive rate hikes, focusing instead on growth risks tied to the conflict. That recalibration has helped bullion regain some ground, though conviction remains limited.
Buyers weigh timing
Despite the rebound, the broader trend still reflects caution. Prices remain well below mid-March peaks, when 24K gold crossed Dh600, highlighting the scale of the recent correction.
Assiri pointed to deeper structural shifts shaping demand.
“The market chose the yield of the dollar and the volatility of oil over the safety of gold,” he said, noting that capital moved toward assets offering stronger returns during the height of uncertainty.
That dynamic is likely to keep buyers selective in the near term. Jewellery shoppers and investors in the UAE are watching for clearer signals on rates and geopolitical stability before committing in size.
Outlook steadies, but not settled
Some global banks continue to maintain a constructive view on gold over the longer term, citing central bank demand and the possibility of rate cuts later this year.
Still, the near-term outlook remains tied to macro signals. Movements in yields, the dollar and energy markets are now playing a more decisive role than geopolitical headlines alone.
GN
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China Suppliers Warn US Prices to Rise Over Hormuz Closure
Pickleball paddle producer Devi Wei has a message for U.S. shoppers.
“Americans will have to pay more,” the Chinese businessman told CNBC at a Beijing trade show last week at the China International Exhibition Center.
Because of the recent swings in oil prices resulting from the Iran war and closure of the Strait of Hormuz, Wei, who founded his own exporting business, Huijin Trade, has had to hike prices on his paddles and pickleballs by as much as 20%, he said.
Wei’s goods are made with polypropylene, a plastic material derived from oil and made in the Middle East, a dominant producer in the global industry. The war in Iran has stalled shipments of oil and its products through the Strait of Hormuz, raising concerns among Chinese manufacturers at the trade fair about further disruption across the global supply chain.
“I might have to go even higher,” Wei said. “Maybe double if the Iran war doesn’t stop soon.”
Surging oil prices are filtering into prices of all kinds of products that rely on the commodity for manufacturing.
James Li, who makes scarves and said he sells a third of his inventory to the U.S., has marked up his polyester products by 5%.
“This scarf is 30% polyester,” Li told CNBC from his trade show booth. “We will definitely pass on the extra cost to our customers.”
Wang Mingming, a general manager of toy manufacturer Jinming Gifts, said he is hoarding two months’ worth of the plastic polymer PVC, but isn’t sure he can hold off charging more for his figurines.
“In our industry, these materials are almost irreplaceable,” Wang said. “If oil prices rise any further, we really won’t be able to manage.”
Cameron Johnson, senior partner at Shanghai-based supply chain consultancy Tidalwave Solutions, said he foresees competition for oil-related products among entire sectors if the crisis at the Strait of Hormuz isn’t resolved soon. A prolonged impasse in the critical waterway also raises the possibility of product shortages.
“If this goes on into May, everyone will be in big trouble and there will be triage between industries,” Johnson said, predicting autos and the medical field would be granted higher priority. “There is no visibility when new supply will come.”
Perhaps the biggest worry among China’s manufacturers is what costlier oil will mean for discretionary spending by consumers worldwide.
More money for gas means less for Wei’s pickleballs.
“Ordinary people are getting squeezed the most from the high oil price,” he said. “Their spending power just isn’t what it used to be.
CNBC
Uncategorized
Dubai gold dips again as global pressures cool recent rally
Gold prices in Dubai eased on Thursday morning, giving shoppers a small breather after several sessions of elevated prices earlier this month.
The 24-karat rate stood at Dh619.75 per gram at around 9.30 am on Thursday, down from Dh623.75 recorded a day earlier. The 22-karat price dropped to Dh574, down from Dh577.50 on Wednesday.
The decline reflects broader global moves in bullion markets after recent US economic data shifted expectations for interest rates and strengthened the dollar.
Recent price swings
Gold prices in Dubai have moved sharply through February and early March, showing how quickly global events are feeding into local jewellery rates.
Mid-February levels were closer to Dh600 per gram for 24-karat gold, with prices around Dh596 on February 12 before gradually climbing above Dh600 in the following days. The rally gathered pace toward the end of the month when prices moved past Dh620, and by February 28, the 24-karat rate had climbed to around Dh636.
The start of March saw an even sharper surge, with prices briefly jumping above Dh640 on March 2, marking one of the highest levels seen this year. Gains proved short-lived. Rates pulled back in the following sessions, falling toward the Dh615 range by March 9 before rebounding again above Dh620 earlier this week.
GN
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