Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA) saw its stock climb modestly Wednesday, holding near $185 in premarket trading following news that the chipmaker is investing $2 billion into AI cloud company Nebius. The move marks another step in Nvidia’s aggressive push into artificial intelligence, coming just ahead of its annual GTC developer conference scheduled for March 16-19 in San Jose.
Shares closed Tuesday at $184.77, up 1.16%, reflecting cautious optimism from investors who are closely watching AI deals as a key driver of long-term growth.
The Nebius partnership underscores Nvidia’s strategy of aligning with cloud and AI players to build data-center capacity. Nebius aims to scale over five gigawatts of compute power by 2030, with facilities co-designed around Nvidia hardware, a move that could solidify the chipmaker’s central role in powering AI workloads globally.
The GTC conference next week is expected to provide investors with key updates on Nvidia’s product roadmap, including chips, AI factories, open models, and “agentic” systems, AI software designed to handle complex tasks with minimal human intervention.
NVIDIA Corporation, NVDA
CEO Jensen Huang will also host an analyst Q&A, where questions about scaling, networking, and next-generation platforms such as Vera Rubin and Feynman are anticipated.
Analysts have emphasized the importance of this event in determining whether Nvidia’s AI deals can translate into meaningful stock gains.
Nvidia’s AI ambitions extend beyond Nebius. Just days ago, Thinking Machines Lab, founded by ex-OpenAI chief Mira Murati, announced it will secure at least a gigawatt of Nvidia’s next-gen Vera Rubin systems through a multi-year partnership. Industry insiders estimate that a gigawatt of compute represents an investment near $50 billion, highlighting the scale of Nvidia’s influence in the AI sector.
Huang called AI “the most powerful knowledge discovery instrument in human history,” while Murati described Nvidia technology as “the foundation on which the entire field is built.” These collaborations reinforce the idea that Nvidia’s market value is increasingly linked to the growth of AI rather than just quarterly chip sales.
Despite these strong AI initiatives, Nvidia faces mounting competition. Broadcom recently projected AI chip sales exceeding $100 billion by 2027, signaling the rise of custom silicon alongside Nvidia’s GPUs. Meanwhile, Meta’s partnership with AMD shows top buyers are seeking alternatives, raising the stakes for Nvidia in a crowded market.
Post-earnings, Nvidia shares dipped slightly, despite exceeding revenue targets, as analysts and investors digest the broader competitive picture. Coupled with macroeconomic factors such as global inflation readings and geopolitical concerns, the market remains cautious. Many now view next week’s GTC conference as the critical gauge for whether Nvidia’s AI investments can provide a sustainable boost to shareholder value.
In summary, Nvidia’s modest stock rise reflects a combination of strategic AI investments and investor anticipation for GTC announcements. While Nebius and Thinking Machines partnerships highlight Nvidia’s leading position in AI compute, competitive pressures and broader market volatility suggest that the company’s path forward, though promising, will require careful execution to fully capitalize on the AI boom.
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