Nvidia (NVDA) delivered $130.4B in operating income for fiscal 2026, a 30-fold increase from $4.2B in fiscal 2023, while maintaining a 71.3% gross margin on $215.9B in revenue. The companyโs Vera Rubin platform, shipping in the second half of 2026, targets $1 trillion in cumulative lifetime sales for Blackwell and Vera Rubin chips combined through end of 2027.
Nvidiaโs forward valuation sits near 16x earnings despite record profitability and visible demand extending to 2027, as the stock trades under $200 after a three-year operational expansion unmatched in semiconductor history.
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The AI infrastructure buildout keeps accelerating. Hyperscalers and enterprises spent record sums on data-center chips last year, and spending shows no sign of peaking. Yet Nvidia (NASDAQ:NVDA) shares trade under $200, as they have since last November.
Yet, one number explains why this is not the top, but rather the entry point savvy investors should be waiting for. That number is Nvidiaโs operating income. Letโs take a closer look at what it reveals about the companyโs operational muscle, its runway ahead, and why the stock still looks cheap.
Nvidia delivered $130.4 billion in operating income for fiscal 2026. Three years earlier, in fiscal 2023, the figure stood at just $4.2 billion. That is a 30-fold expansion in just under three years. Few, if any, companies have ever witnessed such an explosive increase.
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The chipmaker’s fiscal 2026 earnings release shows the full-year total rose 60% from fiscal 2025โs $81.45 billion. Revenue for the year hit $215.9 billion, up 65%, while gross margin held at 71.3% even as the company scaled production of Blackwell GPUs. In plain English, Nvidia turned roughly $0.60 of every revenue dollar into operating profit after costs. That is the kind of leverage most semiconductor firms only dream about.
Compare the trajectory to Nvidiaโs own past. From fiscal 2022โs $10 billion in operating income, the company first contracted, then exploded once AI demand hit. No other major chipmaker posted comparable acceleration. The operating-income surge reflects the CUDA software lock-in, full-stack AI systems, and hyperscaler orders that locked in visibility for quarters ahead. In short, this is not hype-fueled revenue. It is cash-generating power that grew faster than almost anyone modeled.
The growth story does not stop with Blackwell. Nvidiaโs Vera Rubin platform, announced at GTC 2026 and set to ship in the second half of 2026, targets the next leap in agentic AI and inference efficiency. Management outlined $1 trillion in cumulative lifetime sales for Blackwell and Vera Rubin chips combined through the end of 2027. That backlog already sits on the books.
Investors get two years of highly visible demand, as Vera Rubin promises up to 10 times better inference economics versus Blackwell in some workloads. That keeps hyperscalers and sovereign AI projects coming back. Meanwhile, the company positions itself beyond training chips into AI agents, humanoid robotics, and autonomous vehicles. The same operational engine that turned $4 billion into $130 billion now has fresh fuel. Believe it or not, the infrastructure cycle that powered the last three years still has multiple legs left.
Here is where the opportunity sharpens. Nvidia shares change hands today near $177 — well under the $200 level many retail investors still consider the โhighโ mark. The stock trades at roughly less than 16 times forward earnings. That multiple sits far below the triple-digit price-to-earnings ratios the market assigned during earlier hype phases.
Granted, competition from custom silicon and open-source alternatives exists. That said, no rival matches Nvidiaโs ecosystem moat or scale of profitability today. Even after the run-up, the forward multiple prices in only one year of growth while the order book stretches to 2027. When all is said and done, the same operational strength that produced $130 billion in profit now trades at a discount to its trajectory.
Nvidiaโs $130.4 billion operating income for fiscal 2026 is the single number that cuts through the noise. It proves the company converted AI tailwinds into concrete, compounding profits at a speed unmatched in chip history. Vera Rubin sales kick in later this year with another trillion dollars of visibility already secured. At current prices under $200 and a forward multiple in the mid-teens, the stock offers retail investors a rare chance to own the AI infrastructure leader while it still looks reasonable.
No one can guarantee the next leg, but the data shows a business executing at generational scale. Smart investors buy the proven operator, not the narrative. If shares stay under $200, the math favors loading up on Nvidia stock.
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