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NVIDIA (NVDA) FY2026 — M-Score Breached Manipulation Threshold

NVDA·FY2026·English

Grade: F — Major Red Flags

Framework: Schilit *Financial Shenanigans* + Beneish M-Score + forensic accounting principles

Data: SEC EDGAR 10-K (Filed 2026-02-25) + Yahoo Finance

Auditor: PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP — Clean opinion

One-line verdict: NVIDIA is the most profitable semiconductor company in history — $215.9B revenue, $120.1B net income, 55.6% net margin — and three red flags are screaming. The Beneish M-Score of -1.13 breaches the -1.78 threshold, signaling "elevated manipulation risk." Accounts receivable outpaced revenue for two consecutive years. And operating cash flow has trailed net income for three straight years (CFFO/NI of 0.86). The 10-K reveals why: a $4.5B H20 inventory write-down from U.S. export controls, $15.6B in goodwill from acquisitions that quadrupled the balance sheet line item, $95.2B in non-cancelable supply commitments, and revenue concentration where "sales to one direct customer represented 22% of total revenue and sales to another direct customer represented 14%." The growth is real. The risks hidden in the footnotes are also real.

MetricResult
Red Flags**3**
Watch Items**4**
Checks Completed**17/18** (1 N/A)
Beneish M-Score**-1.13** (ABOVE -1.78 threshold — elevated manipulation risk flag)
F-Score (Fraud Probability)**1.53** (0.57% probability)
Altman Z-Score**13.22** (safe zone — no solvency risk)
AuditorPricewaterhouseCoopers LLP — Unqualified opinion
Fiscal Year2026 (ended January 25, 2026)
Report Date2026-04-05

The AI Infrastructure Monopoly

The 10-K describes NVIDIA as "a full-stack data center scale AI infrastructure company reshaping all industries." Revenue by segment from the filing:

SegmentFY2026FY2025FY2024YoY Growth
**Data Center****$193.7B****$115.2B****$47.5B****+68%**
— Compute$162.4B$102.2B$39.0B+59%
— Networking$31.4B$13.0B$8.6B+142%
Gaming$16.0B$11.4B$10.4B+41%
Professional Visualization$3.2B$1.9B$1.6B+70%
Automotive$2.3B$1.7B$1.1B+39%
OEM and Other$0.6B$0.4B$0.3B+59%
**Total****$215.9B****$130.5B****$60.9B****+65%**

Data Center is 89.7% of total revenue. Three years ago it was 78%. NVIDIA is becoming a one-product company — the most profitable one-product company on Earth, but a one-product company nonetheless.

Per the filing: "Revenue for fiscal year 2026 was $215.9 billion, up 65% from a year ago. Data Center revenue for fiscal year 2026 was up 68% from a year ago. The strong year-on-year growth was driven by the major platform shifts accelerated computing and AI."

Operating income by reportable segment:

SegmentFY2026FY2025Change
Compute & Networking$130.1B$82.9B+57%
Graphics$9.2B$5.1B+80%
**Total****$139.3B****$88.0B****+58%**

Profitability: Unprecedented Scale

MetricFY2024FY2025FY2026Trend
Revenue$60.9B$130.5B$215.9B+65% YoY
Gross Profit$44.3B$97.9B$153.5B
Gross Margin72.7%75.0%**71.1%**Down 3.9pp
Operating Income$81.5B$130.4B+60%
Net Income$29.8B$72.9B$120.1B+65%
Net Margin48.8%55.8%55.6%Stable
ROE69.2%91.9%**76.3%**Declining from peak
EPS (diluted)$2.94$4.90+67%

The 10-K states: "Gross margin decreased in fiscal year 2026 as our business model transitioned from offering Hopper HGX systems to Blackwell full-scale datacenter solutions. The gross margin decrease was also impacted by a $4.5 billion charge associated with H20 excess inventory and purchase obligations."

That $4.5B charge alone reduced gross margin by approximately 2.1 percentage points. Excluding it, underlying gross margin would have been approximately 73%. The margin compression is partly structural (selling complete datacenter solutions vs. individual chips) and partly from the forced inventory write-down.

Operating expenses grew 41% to $23.1B — "driven by higher compensation and benefits expenses due to employee growth and compute and infrastructure costs." R&D as a percentage of revenue was 8.6%, down from 9.9%, reflecting operating leverage.

Cash Flow: The Red Flag

This is where the problems surface. Per the filing's cash flow statement:

MetricFY2024FY2025FY2026
Operating Cash Flow$28.1B$64.1B$102.7B
Net Income$29.8B$72.9B$120.1B
**CFFO / Net Income****0.94****0.88****0.86**
CapEx-$1.1B-$3.2B**-$6.0B**
Free Cash Flow$27.0B$60.9B**$96.7B**

CFFO has been below net income for three consecutive years. This is our C1 check — a red flag. When a company consistently reports more profit than it collects in cash, it warrants investigation.

Why is CFFO lagging net income? The cash flow statement reveals the answer:

·Gains on equity securities: $8.9B in non-cash gains (recognized in net income but no cash received)
·Deferred income taxes: -$1.4B (tax benefits that reduce reported tax expense but generate no cash)
·Accounts receivable surge: $15.4B cash absorbed by uncollected receivables
·Inventory buildup: $11.3B cash absorbed by inventory growth

The AR and inventory drains are partially offset by payables and accrued liabilities growth. But the core issue is clear: NVIDIA is booking enormous equity gains and deferring taxes, which inflate net income above cash generation.

FCF of $96.7B is still massive — NVIDIA's CapEx is minimal compared to its hyperscaler customers. But the CFFO/NI ratio below 1.0 for three years is a legitimate concern for earnings quality.

The $4.5B H20 Write-Down

The 10-K provides the full story: "In April 2025, the USG informed us that it requires a license for export to China (including Hong Kong and Macau) and D:5 countries... of our H20 integrated circuits and any other circuits achieving the H20's memory bandwidth, interconnect bandwidth, or combination thereof. As a result of these requirements, we incurred a $4.5 billion charge in the first quarter of fiscal year 2026 associated with H20 for excess inventory and purchase obligations, as the demand for H20 products diminished."

The filing further states: "In August 2025, the USG granted licenses that would allow us to ship certain H20 products to certain China-based customers. We generated approximately $60 million in H20 revenue under those licenses."

$4.5B charge. $60M recovered. A 1.3% recovery rate. This is a near-total loss.

Total inventory provisions for the year: "inventory purchase obligations totaled $7.2 billion and $3.7 billion for fiscal years 2026 and 2025, respectively, including $4.5 billion associated with H20 excess inventory and purchase obligations for the first quarter of fiscal year 2026." Net impact on gross margin: "an unfavorable impact of 2.6%."

Goodwill Quadrupled: $5.2B to $20.8B

Per Note 5 of the filing: "As of January 25, 2026, the total carrying amount of goodwill was $20.8 billion... Goodwill increased by $15.6 billion in fiscal year 2026 and was allocated to our Compute & Networking reporting unit."

This $15.6B increase represents acquisitions during the fiscal year. The filing states goodwill was allocated entirely to Compute & Networking ($20.5B) with $370M in Graphics. The annual qualitative impairment test "concluded that goodwill was not impaired."

Goodwill + intangibles: $24.1B, or 15% of equity. Manageable at current profitability — but this is a 303% year-over-year surge in intangible assets that warrants monitoring.

Customer Concentration: Two Customers = 36% of Revenue

The 10-K states: "For fiscal year 2026, sales to one direct customer represented 22% of total revenue and sales to another direct customer represented 14% of total revenue, all of which were primarily attributable to the Compute & Networking segment."

Two customers account for 36% of $215.9B — approximately $77.7B. The filing warns: "We have experienced periods where we receive a significant amount of our revenue from a limited number of customers, and this trend may continue."

$95.2B in Non-Cancelable Supply Commitments

Per Note 12: "As of January 25, 2026, these commitments were $95.2 billion, of which substantially all will be paid through fiscal year 2027." The filing describes these as "Manufacturing, supply, and capacity commitments [that] reflect datacenter-scale production and longer future ordering horizons across current and future product architectures."

Additional commitments:

·Multi-year cloud service agreements: $27B
·Investment commitments: $11.4B
·Other commitments: $3.4B
·Future lease obligations commencing FY2027-2030: $22.7B, "primarily data center leases to support our research and development efforts"

Product warranty liabilities more than doubled: $2.8B vs. $1.3B a year ago. Selling more complex datacenter-scale systems means more warranty exposure.

The 18-Point Screening

#CheckResultDetail
A1DSO ChangePASSDSO 65 days, +1 day YoY. Stable
A2AR vs Revenue Growth**FAIL**AR outpaced revenue for 2 consecutive years. AR surged $15.4B per cash flow statement
A3Revenue vs CFFOPASSRevenue +65.5%, CFFO +60.3%. Cash generally follows revenue
B1Inventory vs COGSWATCHInventory growth 112.3% exceeds COGS growth 91.4%
B2CapEx vs RevenuePASSCapEx growth 86.7% vs revenue 65.5%. Normal for this growth
B3SG&A RatioPASSSG&A/Gross Profit = 3.0%. Best in class
B4Gross MarginPASS71.1%, down 3.9pp. Decline explained by Blackwell transition and H20 charge
C1CFFO vs Net Income**FAIL**CFFO < Net Income for 3 consecutive years. Ratio: 0.86, 0.88, 0.94
C2Free Cash FlowPASSFCF $96.7B. FCF/NI = 0.81
C3Accruals RatioWATCH8.4%. Elevated — earnings running ahead of cash
C4Cash vs DebtPASSCash $62.6B covers debt $11.0B. 5.7x coverage
D1Goodwill + IntangiblesPASS$24.1B = 15% of equity. Manageable
D2LeveragePASSDebt/EBITDA = 0.1x. Near debt-free. Interest coverage 503x
D3Soft Asset GrowthWATCHOther assets grew 173.2% vs revenue 65.5%
D4Asset ImpairmentN/ANo separate write-off data
E1Serial Acquirer FCFPASSFCF positive after acquisitions
E2Goodwill SurgeWATCHGoodwill + intangibles surged 303% YoY
F1**Beneish M-Score****FAIL****M-Score = -1.13 (> -1.78). ELEVATED MANIPULATION RISK flag**

Beneish M-Score Component Breakdown:

ComponentValueWhat It MeasuresConcern?
DSRI1.008Days Sales in ReceivablesNormal
GMI1.055Gross Margin Index — margin declinedSlight concern
**AQI****1.567****Asset Quality Index — soft assets ballooned****High**
**SGI****1.655****Sales Growth Index — 65% growth****High (expected for hypergrowth)**
DEPI1.061Depreciation IndexNormal
SGAI0.793SG&A Index — operating leverageGood
TATA0.084Total Accruals to Assets — positive accrualsModerate concern
LVGI0.807Leverage Index — deleveragingGood

Important context on the M-Score: The -1.13 reading is driven primarily by AQI (1.567) and SGI (1.655). The AQI spike reflects the $15.6B goodwill increase from acquisitions and the 173% growth in other assets. The SGI spike reflects genuine 65% revenue growth. Beneish's model was calibrated on mature companies growing 5-15%. A company growing 65% will mechanically push SGI above alarm thresholds. This does NOT necessarily mean manipulation — but it does mean the model cannot confirm the earnings are clean, and the other signals (CFFO < NI, rising accruals, inventory surge) reinforce the concern.

Key Risks from the 10-K

1. U.S. Export Controls — Effectively Foreclosed from China

The 10-K's most striking disclosure: "As of the end of fiscal year 2026, we were effectively foreclosed from competing in China's data center computing/compute market, and our effective foreclosure from the China market helped our competitors build larger developer and customer ecosystems to challenge us worldwide."

The filing chronicles an escalating series of export restrictions from August 2022 through February 2026, culminating in: "Under the current rules and geopolitical landscape, we are unable to create and deliver a competitive product for China's data center market that receives approval from both the USG and the Chinese government."

The replacement for the AI Diffusion rule is pending: "In May 2025, the USG announced that it would rescind the AI Diffusion IFR and implement a replacement rule. The scope, timing, and requirements of the forthcoming rule remain uncertain."

2. Supply-Demand Mismatch Risk

The filing warns: "Long manufacturing lead times and uncertain supply and capacity availability, combined with a failure to estimate customer demand accurately, has led and could lead to mismatches between supply and demand." NVIDIA has "$95.2 billion" in non-cancelable commitments. If demand slows, these become stranded costs.

The 10-K specifically states: "We have previously experienced and may continue to experience extended lead times of more than 12 months. To secure future supply and capacity, we have paid premiums, provided deposits, and entered into long-term supply agreements and capacity commitments, which have increased our product costs."

3. Customer Concentration

Two customers = 36% of revenue. Per the filing: "We have experienced periods where we receive a significant amount of our revenue from a limited number of customers, and this trend may continue." If either major customer shifts to in-house chips (as Google, Amazon, and Microsoft are all developing), the revenue impact could be massive.

4. Gross Margin Structural Pressure

The filing states: "Gross margin decreased in fiscal year 2026 as our business model transitioned from offering Hopper HGX systems to Blackwell full-scale datacenter solutions." This is a structural shift — selling complete datacenter systems carries lower margins than selling chips. The 10-K warns of additional factors that "could further cause gross margins to decline," including "customer concentration, competition, yield, product quality, and mix."

5. Tariff Risk

The 10-K discloses that any H200 products shipped under the new China licensing program "will be subject to a 25% tariff upon importation into the United States... we may not be able to pass along all or any of the tariff to our customers."

Key Financial Trends (4-Year)

MetricFY2023FY2024FY2025FY2026
Revenue$27.0B$60.9B$130.5B$215.9B
Net Income$4.4B$29.8B$72.9B$120.1B
Gross Margin56.9%72.7%75.0%71.1%
Net Margin16.2%48.8%55.8%55.6%
ROE19.8%69.2%91.9%76.3%
CFFO$5.6B$28.1B$64.1B$102.7B
CFFO/NI1.290.940.880.86
FCF$3.8B$27.0B$60.9B$96.7B
Cash$13.3B$26.0B$43.2B$62.6B
Total Debt$12.0B$11.1B$10.0B$11.0B
Employees~42,000

Summary

Grade: F. Three red flags require investigation before relying on these earnings as reported.

NVIDIA's business is extraordinary — $215.9B revenue growing 65%, 55.6% net margin, $96.7B in free cash flow, near-zero debt, and an interest coverage ratio of 503x. The Altman Z-Score of 13.22 confirms zero solvency risk. This is a company printing money at a scale the semiconductor industry has never seen.

But our screening framework exists to ask a different question: are the reported numbers trustworthy? Three signals say "investigate further":

1.M-Score of -1.13 breaches the manipulation threshold. The AQI spike (soft assets quadrupling) and SGI (hyper-growth) drive the score. This may be a false positive for a company growing this fast — but the model cannot clear it.
2.CFFO < Net Income for three consecutive years. Operating cash flow of $102.7B against net income of $120.1B. The gap is driven by $8.9B in non-cash equity gains, deferred tax benefits, and massive AR/inventory growth absorbing cash.
3.AR outpaced revenue for two consecutive years. $15.4B in receivables growth on the cash flow statement. DSO is stable at 65 days, which partially mitigates this, but the persistent divergence is a quality signal.

Additional concerns: $95.2B in non-cancelable supply commitments, effective exclusion from the China data center market, 36% revenue concentration in two customers, and $15.6B in acquisitions that quadrupled goodwill.

None of this means NVIDIA is engaging in earnings manipulation. It means the financial statements of a company growing 65% annually, undergoing a business model transition (chips to datacenter solutions), and facing escalating geopolitical disruption require deeper-than-surface reading. The M-Score was designed for exactly this kind of situation — when growth can mask deterioration.

Read the 10-K. Read the footnotes. Then decide.

**Disclaimer**: This report is based on NVIDIA's fiscal year 2026 10-K filed with the SEC on February 25, 2026. This is NOT investment advice.

**About EarningsGrade**: We screen earnings reports for financial red flags using an 18-point forensic framework. Grade F means major red flags were detected that warrant thorough investigation.

This report is based on SEC 10-K filings and public financial data. Not investment advice.

NVIDIA (NVDA) FY2026 — M-Score Breached Manipulation Threshold — EarningsGrade