NVIDIA's Revenue Hits a Record $57 Billion — All GPUs Sold Out Worldwide
NVIDIA has officially announced the highest quarterly revenue in its history — an astonishing $57 billion in a single quarter, setting a new record for both the GPU and AI hardware industries. This massive surge highlights NVIDIA’s dominance in the global AI race and the explosive demand for its high-performance chips.
What caused the revenue explosion?
The unprecedented demand for NVIDIA’s AI processors — particularly the H100 and H200 — is the primary driver. These chips are now the backbone of major AI companies, cloud providers, research institutions, and enterprise data centers worldwide.
At the same time, consumer GPUs from the RTX 40 series are sold out across multiple regions, especially the 4070 SUPER, 4080, and 4090.
Worldwide GPU shortages
Due to high demand across gaming, content creation, and on-device AI workloads, GPU inventory has nearly collapsed worldwide.
The key reasons include:
- Rising interest in local AI model training
- Growth of 4K and high-refresh-rate gaming
- Explosion in video creation and rendering
- Workstation upgrades across creative industries
Even mid-range models like the RTX 4060 are suffering shortages.
A shift in the entire PC industry
The industry is undergoing a major transformation:
GPUs are no longer gaming hardware — they are AI hardware.
This shift explains why NVIDIA’s revenue has skyrocketed and why demand continues to exceed supply by a large margin.
At Feeh Store, demand for high-end RTX GPUs is rising sharply, especially for AI-focused builds and professional workstations capable of handling heavy workloads.
What’s next for NVIDIA?
Analysts predict that NVIDIA may surpass $200 billion in annual revenue within two years if AI adoption continues growing at this pace. The upcoming RTX 50 series and Blackwell AI architecture will further expand the company’s dominance.
NVIDIA is no longer just a GPU company — it is the foundation of the global AI infrastructure.


