NVIDIA (NASDAQ: NVDA | NVDA Price Prediction) and Tesla (NASDAQ: TSLA) just delivered earnings that put two very different AI stories side by side. Tesla finally began fulfilling its decade-old autonomy pitch with unsupervised Robotaxi rides in Dallas and Houston. NVIDIA, meanwhile, kept printing money from AI factories. The stocks are moving in opposite directions, and the businesses behind them look nothing alike.
Data Center Cash vs. A Long-Awaited Robotaxi Moment
NVIDIA’s Q1 FY2027 print was extraordinary. Revenue hit $81.6 billion, up 85.2% year over year, with Data Center alone at $75.25 billion and networking growing 199% YoY. Non-GAAP gross margin held at 75.0%. Jensen Huang framed the moment plainly: “The buildout of AI factories, the largest infrastructure expansion in human history, is accelerating at extraordinary speed.” The board answered with an $80 billion buyback authorization and a dividend hike to $0.25 per share.
Tesla’s Q1 2026 was smaller but symbolically loud. Revenue reached $22.39 billion, up 15.8% YoY, and EPS of $0.41, topping consensus expectations. Automotive gross margin snapped back to 21.1% from 16.2%, helped by lower material costs and one-time warranty and tariff gains. FSD subscriptions climbed to 1.28 million, up 51% YoY. The autonomy story is real now. So is the fact that vehicle deliveries grew only 6% YoY and energy storage revenue fell 12%.
One Sells Shovels. The Other Sells a Vision.
| Lens | NVIDIA | Tesla |
| Trailing P/E | 30 | 382 |
| Core engine | Data Center compute and networking | Vehicles today, robotaxi and Optimus tomorrow |
| Operating margin | 65.6% | 4.2% |
| Key vulnerability | China compute revenue excluded from guidance | Battery pack capacity, BYD pricing, 27 days inventory |
NVIDIA collects cash on every physical handoff, locked in by CUDA and $119 billion in supply commitments. Tesla is a capital-heavy automaker asking investors to keep paying for a software future, with a hyper-inflated trailing P/E over 350x on a 5.9% EBIT margin. Prediction markets remain skeptical of the promised milestones: only 11.5% probability is assigned to a California robotaxi launch by year-end and 12.5% to an Optimus release.
The Next Test Is Whether Tesla’s Milestones Compound
I will be watching whether Tesla can scale Cybercab pilot production, Megapack 3, and Optimus lines without further margin dilution. For NVIDIA, the question is Q2 FY27 guidance of $91 billion in revenue, delivered without any China compute contribution. That is a heavier lift than it sounds.
Why I Lean NVIDIA Over Tesla Right Now
If you want AI exposure that pays its own way, I lean NVIDIA. At $195.55 with a P/E near 30, you are paying for realized cash flow, not a Miami marketing push. Tesla at $419.77 may reward a turnaround investor if Robotaxi scales, but the valuation leaves almost no room for slippage. I would rather own the picks and shovels than another “imminent” promise.
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