Nvidia's closely watched earnings report showed weaker-than-expected sales at its data center business, though the stock's pullback in extended trading may prove short-lived with investors still believing in the artificial intelligence trade. The chipmaker beat Wall Street's expectations for fiscal second-quarter earnings and gave a stronger current-quarter revenue forecast than anticipated. But shares tumbled in after-hours trading as second-quarter data center revenue came in slightly below the Street's consensus view. Still, data center revenue soared 56% from a year ago and made up 88% of total sales. Nvidia said it didn't sell any of its H20 processors to customers in China during the period, but it released $180 million worth of inventory to a client based elsewhere. The knee-jerk re

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