The cost of accessing Nvidia’s H100 GPU infrastructure continues its upward trajectory rather than declining. Hourly rental rates have surged approximately 40% since the fall, escalating from $1.70 to roughly $2.35 per hour, based on SemiAnalysis research encompassing feedback from over 100 market participants.
NVIDIA Corporation, NVDA
Available GPU inventory has reached practical depletion. Organizations that locked in capacity during earlier periods are maintaining their positions despite escalating costs. Certain purchasers have turned to premium-tier spot availability through services like AWS to secure necessary resources.
Supply limitations extend beyond legacy hardware. Nvidia’s latest Blackwell GPU architecture faces identical constraints, with procurement timelines now extending into mid-2026. This contradicts previous market assumptions that enhanced efficiency in next-generation chips would diminish both demand and pricing for existing products like the H100.
The demand surge stems from diverse AI deployment scenarios, spanning media generation platforms at organizations including ByteDance and Google to expanding adoption of large language models such as Anthropic’s Claude.
Underlying the capacity shortage is substantial committed capital investment. Alphabet, Microsoft, Meta, and Amazon collectively plan approximately $700 billion in AI infrastructure expenditure during 2026 alone. These figures represent publicly disclosed capital allocation strategies, not speculative forecasts.
Microsoft has disclosed that roughly two-thirds of its capital deployment targets GPUs and CPUs. Given Nvidia’s dominant 85-90% share of the GPU sector, the majority of this investment flows directly to Nvidia. Even assuming chips represent only 20% of comprehensive AI infrastructure expenses, this suggests over $140 billion in annual chip procurement from merely four major customers.
Nvidia reported Q4 revenues of $68.13 billion, reflecting 73% year-over-year expansion, while its Q1 forecast of $78 billion exceeded analyst expectations by more than $5 billion. Fiscal 2027 revenue growth currently projects 71%.
Despite strong fundamentals, NVDA has declined roughly 6.5% year-to-date, impacted by broader macroeconomic headwinds including energy inflation concerns and market risk aversion. Current valuation stands at 15.7x forward earnings — below both its 3-year historical mean of 19.4x and AMD’s forward multiple of 18.9x, despite Nvidia’s superior market position, margins, and growth trajectory.
A significant catalyst not yet reflected in financial projections: Chinese regulatory authorities have greenlit Nvidia for H100 chip distribution, with authorization granted to several customers. Wells Fargo analysts estimate this opportunity could generate $25 billion or more annually. This revenue potential remains excluded from Nvidia’s latest guidance.
Regarding product development, the forthcoming Vera Rubin platform achieves ten-fold performance-per-watt improvement over Blackwell and approximately 50-fold tokens-per-watt enhancement compared to the earlier Hopper architecture. Distribution is scheduled to commence during the second half of 2026.
Nvidia completed a $2 billion equity position in Marvell Technology (MRVL) on March 31, extending its NVLink ecosystem access to Marvell’s customized AI processors — currently deployed by Amazon, Alphabet, and Microsoft. NVDA appreciated over 5% following that announcement, while Marvell surged 13%.
Wall Street maintains a Strong Buy consensus on NVDA, featuring 41 Buy recommendations, one Hold, and one Sell rating across the past three months. The average analyst price target registers at $273.57.
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