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Nvidia’s Q3 fiscal-2026 results were nothing short of spectacular. The company clocked $57.0 billion in revenue, a 22% increase quarter-over-quarter and a massive 62% year-over-year jump.
The data-centre business, which fuels much of Nvidia’s strength, reported $51.2 billion — up 25% sequentially and a whopping 66% YoY.
Earnings per share (diluted) stood at $1.30, beating market expectations. Gross margins remained healthy: ~73.4% on a GAAP basis and ~73.6% on non-GAAP.
Jensen Huang, Nvidia’s CEO, painted a bold picture: “Blackwell sales are off the charts, and cloud GPUs are sold out … We’ve entered the virtuous cycle of AI.”
On the capital return front, Nvidia has distributed $37 billion to shareholders via buybacks and dividends in the first nine months of fiscal 2026, while still retaining $62.2 billion under its repurchase authorization.
Nvidia’s blazing growth is a clear sign that AI infrastructure is scaling up rapidly. For Indian cloud service providers, startups, and large enterprises, this means greater access to powerful compute — and hence more opportunity to build or scale AI-driven products, whether in generative AI, autonomous systems, or large-language-model applications.
IT services companies such as TCS, Infosys, HCL Tech, and Wipro stand to benefit in multiple ways:
India has long expressed ambitions to build a vibrant semiconductor ecosystem. Nvidia’s strong earnings fuel confidence in the global semiconductor demand outlook — which may in turn accelerate semiconductor-related investments in India.
While Nvidia’s results are a vote of confidence in the AI era, Indian investors and companies should also remain aware of potential headwinds:
For Indian investors looking to play the Nvidia or AI-infrastructure story:
Q1. Does Nvidia’s strong result mean an “AI bubble” is safe to ignore?
Not entirely. While Nvidia’s performance reinforces real demand, investors should maintain a balanced view — growth is strong, but it’s not without risks like supply chain bottlenecks, valuation, and geopolitical concerns.
Q2. How exactly will Indian semiconductor manufacturing benefit from Nvidia’s growth?
Higher global demand for AI chips strengthens the case for semiconductor investments in India. This could encourage more fabs, design centres, and collaborations if Indian policy and capital conditions align.
Q3. Should I invest in Nvidia directly or via Indian IT companies?
Both routes have merit. Direct exposure (NVDA shares) gives pure-play access, but investing in Indian IT companies offers leverage to India’s AI ecosystem growth, possibly with lower volatility and regulatory simplicity.
Q4. How does Swastika Investmart help in this context?
Swastika Investmart is SEBI-registered, offers powerful research tools, and supports international investing. Use its platform for guided insights, risk analysis, and thematic portfolios around AI/semiconductors.
Nvidia’s Q3 earnings are a resounding signal that AI infrastructure is accelerating, and the ripple effects could meaningfully shape the future of Indian technology markets. For Indian investors and corporations alike, this is more than just a U.S. company doing well — it’s an opportunity that aligns with India’s tech ambitions, semiconductor goals, and digital transformation journey.
If you’re looking to position yourself for this wave, Swastika Investmart offers the tools, trust, and technology to help you navigate global markets smartly. Open an account today and explore:


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