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Did Nvidia Just Pop an AI Bubble? Here’s What the Market Says

Did Nvidia Just Pop an AI Bubble? Here’s What the Market Says

Posted on 28 August 2025 By jobuzo

Lukewarm second quarter results from AI powerhouse Nvidia (NVDA) Wednesday have Wall Street bros and the analysts that love them catching all kinds of feelings.

Long a bellwether for how the market views AI in general, the largest company in the world carries enough weight in its $1 trillion valuation to move entire indexes, let alone the tech sector.

That was especially the case over the last two weeks, when handwringing over what Nvidia would say in its second quarter results on Aug. 27 reached a fever pitch.

The TLDR take on what all that was and why it matters? Numbers that showed strong growth from Nvidia were good for AI’s continued bull run; weak numbers would mean that the casino-level spending on AI is finally showing signs of a slowdown.

With investors like the U.S. government and Meta, Google, and the private market plowing billions into AI and its tools, it’s always wise to pause for a minute and see what the short-term projections may be for such a hot sector.

So what do Nvidia’s earnings mean for AI spending?

Well, as is usually the case with analyzing Wall Street, that really depends on who you ask.

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Overall, Nvidia managed to surpass market consensus, with reported Q2 sales of $46.74 billion, up 56% from a year ago, a number that eked past the market’s projected consensus of $46.23 billion. Of that number, roughly $41.1 billion was from the company’s data centers business, which missed its expected target of $41.29 billion.

For some tech sector watchers, that disparity (while considered relatively minor in other businesses) was enough to raise alarm bells that a spending Ice Age could be drawing nigh.

“[Data center operator spending] could tighten at the margins if near-term returns from AI applications remain difficult to quantify,” Emarketer analyst Jacob Bourne wrote in a note to investors.

To others, however, Nvidia’s results were actually a reassuring sign that AI spending and the investors, banks, and VCs funding it have very little to fear from these particular results.

“I don’t care about the seemingly sky-high market capitalization that these stocks have. I’m simply trying to put a valuation on a company that makes what you need to become one of the serious players in AI,” CNBC’s Jim Cramer said after parsing earnings.

“I learned not to question Amazon or Microsoft or Google or Meta or even Tesla — the big customers — a long time ago. They know more than I do … I’m just grateful they let me along for the ride,” Cramer added.

What about everybody else?

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Of course, debate about the bubble wasted no time flourishing across social media Wednesday, with boosters and doubters posting everything from super-long treatises to hot take memes on how close to calamity or calm we are now.

just listened to two moms at the playground saying they want to look into starting an “ai dentistry” practice. guys it’s a bubble it’s a bubble pic.twitter.com/oAEbqjddrc

— bwabbage (@bwabbage) August 27, 2025

Is it good at NVIDIA missed data center revenue estimates two quarters running? They were estimated at $41.3bn and hit $41.09bn, were estimated at $39.3bn last quarter and hit $39.1bn. Nobody wanted to talk about this last quarter, wonder if they’ll pretend again this one

[image or embed]

— Ed Zitron (@edzitron.com) August 27, 2025 at 4:32 PM

Nvidia delivered more revenue than expected over the recent three-month period ending in July, the company said on Wednesday, defying concern among some prominent figures about a possible bubble in the AI industry. https://t.co/yuXPMcqSMY

— ABC News (@ABC) August 27, 2025

The wonky takeaway?

It’s probably best to hedge your bets on AI as a never-ending juggernaut of growth.

With data center and growths numbers like the ones posted Wednesday, the outlook surrounding Nvidia’s earnings has heightened fears that the current surge in investment in artificial intelligence (AI) systems may be unsustainable in the long run.

You can now expect a growing chorus of analysts to question whether valuations are justified by actual revenue potential, especially amid broader economic uncertainties.

Nvidia’s outlook for its business in China was also a key part of its Q2 guidance and highlighted two potentially major hurdles to growth: Disappointing numbers reported from that region, and a continuing uncertainty on what it might expect from American domestic policies.

Specifically worrisome is that, despite the Trump administration recently easing restrictions on exports of certain AI chips to Beijing, this policy shift has yet to produce a meaningful recovery in Nvidia’s revenue from the region.

The lingering difficulties in the Chinese market also continue to cast a shadow over the company’s growth prospects, highlighting how geopolitical tensions remain a significant headwind for the semiconductor giant.

Did Nvidia Just Pop an AI Bubble? Here’s What the Market Says


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