Nvidia earnings videos May 24
- Moneyvest and We Profit with Stock Curry posted Nvidia-focused YouTube videos on May 23, 2026, pitching earnings as a near-term trading catalyst. - One video said Nvidia earnings were “just released” and named Super Micro Computer, First Solar and EOS Energy as post-earnings stock ideas. - Gamers Nexus posted a separate Nvidia video two days ago; all three videos remain viewable on YouTube.
Moneyvest, We Profit with Stock Curry and Gamers Nexus posted Nvidia-focused YouTube videos between May 22 and May 23 that framed Nvidia’s latest earnings as a trigger for broader investing decisions, according to their YouTube listings. The titles ranged from “Opportunity of a LIFETIME! Nvidia Earnings: WATCH IF YOU OWN NVDA!” to “Top 3 Stocks About to Explode After Nvidia Earnings” and “NVIDIA is Not a Loser | Abandoning the Personal Computer.” The videos appeared within roughly a 48-hour window on YouTube, where creators often use earnings events to drive retail-investor traffic. The available YouTube metadata shows the videos emphasized Nvidia’s report, adjacent stock ideas and a wider debate over how to classify the company’s business. ### Which videos went up around Nvidia’s earnings? YouTube showed Moneyvest’s “I NEED to Address THIS NOW!! Opportunity of a LIFETIME! Nvidia Earnings: WATCH IF YOU OWN NVDA!” as published “yesterday” and crawled “yesterday,” with 1,674 views and 193 likes at the time of the indexed result. The listing also showed the channel had about 110,000 subscribers and included a disclaimer saying the material was “not financial or investment advice” and was “for entertainment purposes only.” (youtube.com) We Profit with Stock Curry posted “Top 3 Stocks About to Explode After Nvidia Earnings,” and the YouTube result said the video had 1,367 views and was uploaded on May 23, 2026. The description opened with “Nvidia earnings were just released” and said the creator had identified “the top 3 stocks to buy now to take advantage of datacenter growth.” Gamers Nexus posted “NVIDIA is Not a Loser | Abandoning the Personal Computer,” which YouTube indexed as published two days ago with 7,601 views at the time of the result. (youtube.com) Its description said Nvidia had “recently held its earnings call” and had announced a change that would move gaming revenue into other subcategories while expanding disclosure on data center revenue. (youtube.com) ### What were creators telling viewers to watch after the report? The We Profit with Stock Curry video named Super Micro Computer, First Solar and EOS Energy in its description, tying each to “datacenter growth” after Nvidia’s report. The same description said “AI datacenter growth nearly doubled,” and pitched the basket as “best AI stocks to buy now,” language commonly used to steer viewers beyond the company that reported earnings. (youtube.com) Moneyvest’s video used more urgent wording. The title called the moment an “Opportunity of a LIFETIME,” while the description warned viewers to “BE READY NOW” and referenced “volatility signals” and Nvidia alongside macro headlines. The listing did not provide a transcript, but the title and description show the video was aimed at investors already holding Nvidia shares or considering a near-term trade around the stock. (youtube.com) ### Where does the “sympathy trade” idea show up? The clearest evidence is in the stock selection. We Profit with Stock Curry did not limit the pitch to Nvidia stock itself and instead highlighted three other companies after saying Nvidia’s earnings had been released. That approach fits a familiar post-earnings pattern in retail market coverage: creators use a marquee company’s results to point viewers toward suppliers, infrastructure names or adjacent beneficiaries. (youtube.com) Gamers Nexus approached the same event from a different angle. Its description focused on Nvidia’s internal reporting categories, especially the treatment of gaming revenue versus data center revenue, suggesting that at least some creator coverage was moving from the quarter’s headline numbers to the structure of Nvidia’s business. ### What can be verified, and what cannot? (youtube.com) YouTube’s indexed pages verify the titles, timing, view counts shown at crawl time, channel names and portions of the descriptions for all three videos. The indexed material also verifies that at least one creator explicitly tied Nvidia’s earnings to a list of other stock ideas and that another framed the earnings moment as urgent for Nvidia holders. (youtube.com) Transcripts were not available in the indexed results reviewed here, so the full spoken arguments inside the videos could not be independently confirmed from the available source material. As of May 24, 2026, the videos remained available on YouTube under the listed titles and channels. (youtube.com)