Nvidia Earnings Ahead with China, AI Spend in Focus

Nvidia (NVDA) approaches Wednesday afternoon's earnings report in much better shape than three months ago when it suffered a severe backlash from tariffs and restrictions on chip exports to China. Nvidia fell briefly below $90 per share in early April and was just starting to recover in May when the company last reported.

Since then, the stock soared to new all-time highs near $180—more than double its April trough—as the company deftly worked through its trade issues, and the Trump administration backed off the most restrictive tariffs against China.

Though Nvidia is just one stock, its earnings carry lots of weight in the S&P 500® index (SPX), meaning strength or weakness in its Q2 results for fiscal 2026 could have a broad impact.

"Going into this earnings report, no company (since 1981 when records began) has ever accounted for a larger percentage of the S&P 500's market capitalization, which means this is no longer just a quarterly earnings release but a macro market event that warrants attention, even if you aren't directly invested in Nvidia shares," said Alex Coffey, senior trading and derivatives strategist at Schwab.

Nvidia's market capitalization recently reached $4.4 trillion, nearly equaling the market cap of the entire S&P health care sector and representing more than 8% of the S&P 500's total value.

NVDA YTD graph

Nvidia stock has done so well over the last few weeks that it may take a blowout earnings report to get investors much more excited. Shares sported a forward price-to-earnings (P/E) multiple above 42 by mid-August, according to research firm CFRA, and Nvidia's market capitalization has more than doubled in just over a year. The SPX has a forward P/E of just above 22, by comparison.