Nvidia’s Results Are More Important Than Most Investors Want To Believe


Nvidia’s earnings carry a lot of weight for the entire market because expectations for earnings growth from Nvidia drive much of the success of the Magnificent Seven and, thus, the S&P 500. If you want to know why the Magnificent Seven has outperformed this year, it is primarily because of expected earnings growth of some 40% this year and then by 22% next year.

This is the only part of the S&P 500 growing at this pace, especially considering the S&P 500 is expected to see no growth in 2023 and about 10% growth in 2024, based on the Bloomberg Magnificent 7 index. The S&P 500 equal weight index is up less than 5%.
 


Since the middle of May, when Nvidia reported the blowout earnings report and gave significantly higher-than-expected guidance, earnings estimates for the group have increased by 17.5% for this year and 18.3% for next year. This, plus some multiple expansion, has helped to drive the Magnificent 7 index higher by around 30%.
 


Since the middle of May, earnings revisions for most of the companies have been modest, and perhaps surprisingly, Apple (AAPL), Microsoft (MSFT), and Alphabet (GOOGL) have seen hardly any upward revisions to their forecast, while Tesla (TSLA) has seen its earnings forecast slashed. Meta (META) has seen healthy upward revisions, and anyone who has followed Amazon (AMZN) long enough knows that earnings growth from the company is not dependable.

The only company that has seen a huge and outsized increase in earnings revisions is Nvidia. The company's earnings estimates since its May earnings reports have risen by almost 140% for fiscal year 2024 and 190% for fiscal year 2025.
 

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Therefore, it seems pretty logical to assume that almost all of the increase in earnings estimates we have seen in the Magnificent Seven has come from Nvidia since the rest of the index is not delivering much, if any, increase in earnings revisions since the middle of May. Additionally, Nvidia accounts for about 25% of the overall growth in the total index from this year to next year.

This tells us just how important Nvidia has become to the story of the Magnificent Seven and, more importantly, how vital guidance from the company will be when it reports results this week. It will need to support the current earnings estimates and, more importantly, be better than expected to drive earnings growth higher to help propel the market further to the upside.

 

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The options market appears to be very bullish on Nvidia, at least based on the skew of the 95% and 105% moneyness strike prices. The skew has swung back to the call side of the equation from heavily skewed to the puts side. This tells us that implied volatility for the calls is rising, which suggests that the demand for the calls is stronger than that of the puts. This is similar to what was seen in the July.

 


The Nvidia long straddle, which means owning one call and one put for the same expiration date, suggests the stock rises or falls by 6.8% by options expiring on Nov. 24. One would think that as we approach results on Nov. 21 after the close of trading, that IV continues to rise, and that implied move also increases.
 

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This means that once the results come out, the implied volatility, which I assume will be at levels equal to that of July at over 100%, will melt, and that means that the values of the puts and the calls will start to decay as the IV returns to lower levels.

It is important to remember that the market is closed on Thursday and it is only a half day on Friday. Additionally, since the call activity has been heavier, there is far more call delta for expiration on Friday than the put delta.

Based on the data from Bloomberg and what I could calculate, the max call delta comes at $500. I estimate a total notional call delta of about $3.33 billion, a notional put delta of about $1.06 billion, and a total positive delta of $2.28 billion.

This tells us that instead of an implied volatility crush sending the stock higher as puts and calls lose value, causing market makers to buy back hedges, since skew typically put heavy, when the calls start to lose value, the stock will see market maker most likely unwind long hedging and sell the stock.
 


Suppose the results are stellar and significantly better than the expected $3.36 per share and $16.1 billion in revenue for the fiscal third quarter, and the guidance for the fourth quarter is considerably better than the $3.76 per share and $17.9 billion revenue estimates. Then, the stock could rise. However, it would seem that anything inline or slightly better may not be good enough and could result in the stock falling.

The stock has certainly been range-bound for a few months now, and if one wanted to, you call this a solid five waves up for the stock if you go back to the rally that started in 2015. Some Fibonacci levels seem to work in more than one place.
 

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Disclosure: Michael Kramer and the clients of Mott Capital own AAPL, MSFT, AMZN, and GOOGL. Charts used with the permission of Bloomberg Finance L.P. 

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Whimsical Wealth 5 months ago Member's comment

Makes sense.