Gaming Is the Story Now, But Data Centers Are the Future for NVIDIA Corporation
NVIDIA Corporation (NASDAQ: NVDA) made 58% of its total revenue from its gaming segment in 2016. The company's graphics processing units (GPUs) not only bring in the vast majority of NVIDIA's revenues, but they also are the leading GPU in desktops, taking up just over 70%of all discrete desktop GPU market share and leaving rival Advanced Micro Devices with the rest.
Gaming is clearly NVIDIA's bread and butter right now, but investors might want to look at the company's data-center business if they want to peek into the company's future.
Image source: Getty Images.
The data-center opportunity
NVIDIA's fiscal fourth-quarter 2017 data center revenue was just $296 million, representing about 22% of total sales. That's not a lot compared with NVIDIA's gaming revenue, but don't count it out just yet. Data-center revenue grew by an amazing 205% year over year in the quarter and has been on a tear over the past few quarters. Take a look:
Data source: NVIDIA.
NVIDIA CEO Jen-Hsun Huanghas said that his company has been investing in virtualization, computational science, and deep learning within its data-center business, which has helped lead to its growth.
The company is already using its GPUs in data-center servers for numerous tech giants. Data centers powered by GPUs tend to perform better than traditional servers because of their capacity to process image data (photos and videos) much more quickly.
Final thoughts
The key to achieving more data-center growth will come from boosting the company'salready strong position in artificial intelligence through its DGX-1 supercomputer,high-performance computing, and cloud computing offerings.
Huang said these markets have already brought growth for NVIDIA's data centers and added, "My sense is that as we look forward to next year, we're going to continue to see that major trend."
The long-term benefit for NVIDIA is that deep learning and AI, which rely heavily on GPUs, will become even more important in the data-center business. "The fact of the matter is at this point, deep learning and AI [have] really become how future software development's going to be done for a large number of industries, and that's the enthusiasm we're seeing around the world,"Huang said.
NVIDIA's gaming segment will certainly retain its importance in the company's future, and NVIDIA's growing driverless-car technologies will play a major role as well -- but investors shouldn't overlook the company's ability to transform the data-center market with its GPUs.
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