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With Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA) scheduled to report its fiscal 2027 first-quarter results on May 20, prediction markets are already humming. On Polymarket, the implied probability that Nvidia will beat expectations sits around 90%. Clearly, the crowd is leaning bullish. But does that mean smart investors should follow prediction markets blindly into earnings season?
Among the Wall Street analysts who cover Nvidia, the consensus estimates heading into the Q1 report call for revenue of $78.8 billion and earnings per share (EPS) of $1.77. Some are more optimistic, however.
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Goldman Sachs analyst James Schneider is forecasting that Nvidia will beat the consensus revenue estimate by about $2 billion. Meanwhile, his fiscal Q2 revenue forecast of $87.7 billion is slightly above Wall Street’s average of $86.6 billion, and his Q2 EPS estimate of $2.07 is roughly 6% higher than the average.
Prediction markets can be useful as sentiment aggregators, but treating these platforms as a genuine trading barometer for a single company is where investors will run into trouble. These platforms reflect “the wisdom of the crowd” in real time, which sounds valid — until you consider what most people actually know.
In the case of Nvidia’s quarterly results, the average bettor on Polymarket doesn’t have any more information than the generic public does, and that is already priced into Nvidia stock. The informational edge in predicting whether Nvidia will beat expectations belongs to supply chain analysts, channel checks, and institutional desks with deep industry relationships — not average outsiders trading on bet tickets.
Nvidia’s implied beat probability in a prediction market tells you more about macro sentiment, not something about the company’s actual bookings or chip shipment velocity. And that sentiment gets reflected in its stock price in a similar way.
The smarter approach is to look at what has already been reported. Nvidia’s largest data center customers recently told investors exactly how much they plan to spend on artificial intelligence (AI) infrastructure this year. The big four hyperscalers — Alphabet (NASDAQ: GOOGL) (NASDAQ: GOOG), Amazon (NASDAQ: AMZN), Meta Platforms (NASDAQ: META), and Microsoft (NASDAQ: MSFT) — are forecasting combined 2026 capital expenditures of more than $700 billion. Meta, Alphabet, and Microsoft also raised their full-year capex guidance during their respective earnings calls.