In the third quarter ended October 26, 2025, NVIDIA reported all-time high revenue of $57.0 billion, representing a 62% year-over-year increase, and diluted earnings per share of $1.30, up 67% from the prior year. Data center revenue, which accounted for 90% of total sales, reached $51.2 billion, marking a 66% rise compared to the same period in 2024. These results surpassed consensus analyst forecasts on both the top and bottom lines and underscored NVIDIA’s leading position in supplying GPUs and AI accelerators to hyperscale cloud providers and enterprise AI deployments. Analyst consensus prepared by 24/7 Wall St. projects NVIDIA’s fiscal metrics to climb steadily into the decade’s end: revenue rising from $168.2 billion in 2026 to $265.5 billion in 2030, and net income growing from $95.2 billion to $175.4 billion over the same period. Corresponding EPS is expected to progress from $3.83 to $7.24, based on stable operating margins. Price-to-earnings multiples assumed at 50x suggest a year-end 2030 share valuation of $318.42, implying over 70% potential upside from current levels, while a bull-case P/E of 70x raises the upper target to $506.80. During the last week of October 2025, NVIDIA became the first public company to exceed a $5 trillion market capitalization, building on its July milestone of a $4 trillion valuation. These achievements came just one month after the company overtook the world’s former largest public firms to secure membership in the $3 trillion club. Despite a 2.9% pullback over the five trading sessions to January 13, shares remain up nearly 39% over the past year, illustrating sustained investor confidence in NVIDIA’s long-term growth prospects. Over the past decade, NVIDIA’s annual revenue expanded from $10.9 billion in 2020 to nearly $61.0 billion in 2024, a compound growth rate exceeding 55% per annum. Net income surged from $3.6 billion to $29.8 billion over the same period, representing a more than 800% increase. Since its IPO in 1999, the company has engineered a total shareholder return of over 470,000%, driven by successive product generations—from gaming GPUs to AI-optimized tensor cores—and a series of stock splits that enhanced liquidity and broadened the shareholder base.