- Business model has substantial challenges:
- Very capital intensive
- Effectively a 1-2 product business model (GPU business and everything else)
- Intellectual property is transportable: face cannibalization from other manufacturers integrating NVDA intellectual property into their chipset
- Substantial customer concentration (2 customers comprise 19% of Revenue; see 10-K, page 51)
- Sustained trend of deteriorating top-line growth
- Margins under continued pressure
- Deteriorating FCF and net working capital
- Earning’s power likely to remain challenged with operating expenses already returning to peak levels, even at significantly lower revenue rates
Key takeaways on NVDA's Earnings:
- Weaker-than-expected forecast for sales outlook, expecting revenue to be seasonally down 3% to 5% sequentially (Implied $950-970mm range)
- Top-line: revenue of $1.0bn for Q1 FY2011, up 2% from Q4 FY2010 and up 51% from $664.2 million in Q1 FY2010
- Bottom-Line: TQ! FY2001 GAAP profit of $137.6 million, or $0.23/share (above analyst mean of $0.22), compared with a loss of $201.3 million, or $0.37/share, for the year-earlier period.
- Gross margin increased to 45.6% from 44.7% in the previous quarter and 28.6% a year earlier (largely due to Fermi products, targeting the high-end gamer market; this may not be sustainable).
Implications:
- I am concerned about Management's guidance for a seasonal revenue decline, particularly given new product cycles ramping up (i.e., Fermi, Tegra for phones, etc.), capacity is easing, inventory is increasing and GPU demand has remained robust
- While GPU revenue has remained relatively constant (+0.2% sequentially), I am concerned that their restatement of including MCP segment revenue within GPU revenue may be masking further top-line deterioration in their core GPU segment; this was a central part of my thesis.
- They are operating non-core / non-market leading segments (i.e., Consumer Products business: game consoles, etc.) represents only 3% of revenue and is down 31% sequentially this quarter. I think their focus is diluted.

On an un-levered basis, the trade yielded a 16% compound rate of return in just over one month (193% annualized). I implemented the trade through Sep-10 $17-strike put options purchased for $1.08, which yielded a 70% return for the trade (519% annualized). Accounting for volatility, the Sharpe of the trade was 0.5.
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