Do You Have to Pay Taxes on Stocks? Short answer: […]


Nvidia (NVDA -5%) posted one of the best earnings reports in the history of earnings reports on Wednesday. Then the stock fell anyway.
BACKGROUND
The numbers were genuinely impressive. Revenue hit $68.1 billion for the quarter — up 73% from a year ago — well ahead of what analysts were expecting. Earnings per share came in at $1.62 versus the $1.53 Wall Street had penciled in. Guidance for next quarter also topped expectations, with Nvidia forecasting $78 billion in sales.
And yet — down 5%.
THE DETAILS
Here's the thing: Nvidia beats earnings so often that the market has basically stopped rewarding it for doing so. The real question investors are asking isn't "did Nvidia crush it this quarter?" It's "can they keep this up?"
The concern isn't Nvidia's current business — it's the future. Big tech companies like Microsoft, Amazon, Meta, and Google have been pouring hundreds of billions into AI infrastructure, and much of that spending flows straight to Nvidia. But investors are starting to wonder how long those budgets can keep growing — and what happens to Nvidia when they slow down.
Worth noting: Because Nvidia is the largest company in the U.S. by market value, its drop alone dragged down the S&P 500 — even though most other stocks in the index actually rose on the day.
THE KICKER
Nvidia made $68 billion in a single quarter and the market shrugged. At some point, the bar gets so high that even the world's most valuable company can't clear it — and that's not really Nvidia's problem, it's ours.
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