Don’t let Nvidia‘s (NASDAQ: NVDA) 1.7% decline on May 21 fool you. The chip giant’s first-quarter fiscal 2027 report was every bit of a showstopper, featuring $81.6 billion in quarterly revenue — a 20% quarter-over-quarter and 85% year-over-year increase. Even more impressive is that Nvidia converted a mind-numbing 65.6% of its revenue into operating income in the period ended April 26.
Despite its behemoth size, Nvidia is defying the laws of business physics by maintaining a breakneck top- and bottom-line growth rate, which is leading to more cash flow than Nvidia needs to reinvest in its business.
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As a result, Nvidia’s board of directors approved an additional $80 billion share-repurchase authorization and announced a massive increase in its quarterly dividend from $0.01 per share to $0.25 per share. Here’s why Nvidia’s dividend increase makes it even more of a screaming buy now.
Nvidia’s dividend increase makes perfect sense
In March, I correctly predicted that Nvidia would make a substantial dividend increase in 2026 based on comments from CFO Colette Kress at the company’s GTC 2026 conference. Kress said that Nvidia plans to return at least 50% of free cash flow (FCF) to shareholders through dividends, especially in the second half of the year as it works through some investments. And given that Nvidia’s buyback program is already massive, and its dividend was just $0.01 per share (a yield of 0.02%), a dividend raise was the logical next step in Nvidia’s evolution into a mature, industry-leading tech giant rather than a high-flying cyclical growth stock.
Nvidia initiated its dividend back in 2012, and while it was somewhat meaningful at the time, the payout became comically small as the stock soared in value. Nvidia’s latest dividend raise doesn’t make it a high-yield stock, but it will have a yield around 0.4%, which is in the ballpark of other tech giants like Apple (NASDAQ: AAPL), Alphabet, and Meta Platforms.
However, some investors may prefer Nvidia to reinvest that capital into the business rather than return it directly to shareholders. After all, there’s a long list of formerly innovative tech companies that became dividend-paying stalwarts, only to lose market share over time. But Nvidia is different.
Despite increasing its payout by 2,400%, Nvidia will only be paying around $6.08 billion per quarter in dividends or $24.3 billion per year. Nvidia just booked $58.3 billion in net income in a single quarter. So even if Nvidia’s growth slowed, it could simply pull back on buybacks with plenty of dry powder to support its dividend.
