NVIDIA (NASDAQ: NVDA) has announced record-breaking financial results for the fourth quarter and fiscal year 2025, driven by surging demand for AI and accelerated computing technologies. The company reported quarterly revenue of $39.3 billion, marking a 12% increase from Q3 and a 78% rise year-over-year. Full-year revenue soared to $130.5 billion, reflecting 114% growth compared to the previous year. For the fourth quarter, NVIDIA’s GAAP diluted earnings per share (EPS) reached $0.89, up 14% from Q3 and 82% from a year ago.

Non-GAAP diluted EPS also stood at $0.89, showing 10% growth quarter-over-quarter and 71% year-over-year. Fiscal 2025 GAAP EPS totaled $2.94, up 147% from the previous year, while non-GAAP EPS was $2.99, marking a 130% increase. NVIDIA’s Data Center division was the primary driver of growth, generating a record $35.6 billion in revenue for Q4, up 16% from Q3 and 93% from a year ago. The full-year Data Center revenue surged 142% to $115.2 billion, fueled by the adoption of Blackwell AI supercomputers and the increasing demand for AI workloads.
CEO Jensen Huang highlighted the transformative role of AI, stating that “demand for Blackwell is amazing as reasoning AI adds another scaling law increasing compute for training makes models smarter and increasing compute for long thinking makes the answer smarter.” The company also announced a quarterly cash dividend of $0.01 per share, payable on April 2, 2025, to shareholders of record as of March 12, 2025. NVIDIA’s Gaming division reported $2.5 billion in revenue for Q4, down 22% from the previous quarter and 11% year-over-year, but full-year gaming revenue grew 9% to $11.4 billion.
In the automotive sector, revenue for Q4 rose 27% from Q3 and 103% year-over-year to $570 million, with annual revenue reaching $1.7 billion, a 55% increase from the previous fiscal year. For fiscal Q1 2026, NVIDIA projects revenue of $43 billion, plus or minus 2%, with GAAP and non-GAAP gross margins expected at 70.6% and 71.0%, respectively. Operating expenses are anticipated to be approximately $5.2 billion (GAAP) and $3.6 billion (non-GAAP).
The company’s AI and accelerated computing innovations continue to expand, with partnerships announced for NVIDIA’s GB200 AI infrastructure across major cloud providers, including AWS, Google Cloud, Microsoft Azure, and Oracle Cloud Infrastructure. NVIDIA has also strengthened its presence in AI-driven industries, unveiling AI Blueprints, the Llama Nemotron model family, and NVIDIA NIM microservices. The company continues to advance healthcare AI, partnering with organizations such as IQVIA, Mayo Clinic, and Siemens Healthineers.
In the automotive sector, NVIDIA announced collaborations with Toyota and Hyundai to enhance vehicle AI capabilities. The company remains a dominant force in AI and accelerated computing, with its latest financial results reaffirming its leadership position in the industry. Investors and analysts can access NVIDIA’s full financial report and listen to the Q4 earnings call replay via the NVIDIA Investor Relations website. – By MENA Newswire News Desk.