Eighty-one point six billion dollars. That’s what Nvidia printed for Q1 fiscal 2027 – a number that would have been unthinkable for any semiconductor company three years ago. Revenue up 85% year over year. Data Center revenue up 92% to $75.2 billion. Non-GAAP EPS of $1.87 against a consensus of $1.77. A $91 billion forward guidance figure for Q2 that blew past the $86.84 billion Street estimate by a margin that should have been rocket fuel.
The stock fell.
Not catastrophically. But NVDA closed down roughly 1.8% the session following the May 20th report, and has drifted another 2.1% lower in the week since, sitting near $214.86 at last check – closer to the lower end of its post-earnings range of $212–$221. For traders who loaded into calls ahead of a historically massive print, that’s a cold reminder: implied volatility crushes on delivery, not on the beat.
The Setup vs. The Reaction
Here’s where it gets interesting. Going into earnings, the options market was pricing roughly a ±5% expected move – about $11 per share on the at-the-money straddle. The actual print came in at -1.77%. That’s a massive vol crush. Straddle sellers cleaned up. Long premium players got humbled despite a genuinely extraordinary fundamental quarter.
This is the core tension in NVDA right now. The math keeps accelerating – Jensen Huang called the AI factory buildout “the largest infrastructure expansion in human history,” and the numbers back that framing. Free cash flow hit $49 billion. Gross margins held firm at 75%. The company authorized an additional $80 billion in share repurchases and boosted its quarterly dividend from $0.01 to $0.25 per share. And yet the market’s response was a shrug.
Why? Partly valuation compression. With a market cap near $5.1 trillion and a PE around 32.56x trailing earnings, the bar for surprise is absurdly high. Partly China overhang – the company explicitly noted it is not assuming any Data Center compute revenue from China in its Q2 outlook, a meaningful gap given Huawei’s increasingly competitive AI chip presence. And partly the broader macro drag: 30-year Treasury yields hit 5.19% the day before earnings, a 19-year high, pulling risk appetite broadly lower.
What the Options Market Says Now
With the post-earnings IV crush in the rearview, NVDA’s options have repriced toward a more normalized regime. The next catalyst is Q2 earnings, estimated for late August 2026. That gives traders a roughly 90-day window before the next scheduled vol event.
The put/call structure post-earnings leans mildly bearish near-term – not a panic signal, but not the aggressive call-buying frenzy that preceded May 20th either. Dealers are no longer loaded long gamma, which removes some of the mechanical upside bid that existed going into the report.
For traders with a defined-risk orientation, the current environment may favor range-bound structures rather than directional bets. If you believe NVDA consolidates between $205 and $225 over the next 60 days while the macro noise settles, a short iron condor centered on that range captures elevated residual IV without requiring a directional conviction. For bulls who believe the $91 billion Q2 guide re-rates the stock higher into summer, a debit call spread targeting $225–$240 offers defined risk with leverage to a re-acceleration narrative. Bears pointing to China restrictions, Huawei competition, and rate-driven multiple compression might consider a put spread in the $195–$210 zone as a hedge rather than a directional bet.
The underlying story here is not that Nvidia is broken. It clearly isn’t. The story is that the options market already knew the quarter was going to be extraordinary – and priced it accordingly. What it couldn’t price was the macro backdrop that showed up the same week. That tension between an AI supercycle in full sprint and a bond market signaling inflation is far from dead is the real trade in NVDA right now. The next 90 days will tell us which force wins.
Next estimated earnings: August 26, 2026. Mark it.
