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Nvidia News

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  • A Offline
    A Offline
    Adam Kay
    Global Moderator
    wrote last edited by
    #97

    Baidu’s Robotaxis Are Coming to Europe – and It’s Great News for NVIDIA

    Baidu is getting ready to launch its Apollo Go robotaxi service in Europe, starting with trials in Switzerland by the end of 2025. It’s a big step—not just for Baidu, but for the entire autonomous driving industry. If all goes well, we could see self-driving cars on European roads sooner than many expected.

    One of the key players behind the scenes is NVIDIA. Baidu’s robotaxis run on NVIDIA’s advanced autonomous tech, likely using the DRIVE Orin platform—and possibly the new DRIVE Thor in the near future. That’s a big boost for NVIDIA, which is already dominating the AI hardware space.

    This launch isn’t just a test run—it’s a sign that robotaxis are moving from niche tech to real-world transport. Baidu has already scaled up in China, and if it can overcome Europe’s stricter rules and more complex roads, it could roll out hundreds or even thousands of vehicles across the continent.

    For NVIDIA, it means more demand for its chips and a stronger foothold in the future of mobility. For everyone else, it’s one step closer to catching a self-driving ride to work.

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    • A Offline
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      Adam Kay
      Global Moderator
      wrote last edited by
      #98

      An update on the $5.5B H20 provision
      NVIDIA’s ability to absorb a $5.5 billion provision for H20 chip export restrictions in April 2025 without issuing a profit warning strongly suggests they performed exceptionally well in Q1.

      They have always issued warnings in the past and their timing of same supports the conclusion that they will not need to because they did so well. I'm staggered to be honest-assuming this holds(and the evidence is there). This would need to be a beat of $10B+. Did they guide $41B and managed $50B.

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      • A Offline
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        Adam Kay
        Global Moderator
        wrote last edited by Adam Kay
        #99

        Bloomberg reported that the Trump administration is close to sorting out a deal to let the UAE bring in 500,000 Nvidia AI chips every year until 2027. This comes after scrapping the Biden-era rules that limited AI chip exports.

        It’s all part of a bigger push to boost tech ties with Gulf countries, helping the UAE ramp up its AI game while keeping an eye on US security concerns.

        Assuming a fully built system(rack) this is approval to spend $30 billion annually (60k per chip) or 7,000 racks at todays prices.

        I call this 'Fully Loaded Cost Allocation' where we aggregate all Nvidia rack costs and apportion it to the GPU count. A rack is not just a GPU. It requires a CPU/DPU/Switch etc.

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        • A Offline
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          Adam Kay
          Global Moderator
          wrote last edited by Adam Kay
          #100

          It's worth reposting an old slide showing the approx ramp up of supply. Today various sources suggest Nvidia has a known back-log or committed orders of 9.5GW of data centre. with Huang stating that 1 GW is $40-$50B in revenue. That's half a trillion dollars.

          The industry is moving to a describing the scale of installation by Megawatts and Gigawatts. So in the above example, 500k GB300 would be rated at:

          140KW/rack (72 x 1.4Kw GPU) +CPU/memory etc
          500k/72 =circa 7,000 racks
          7,000 x 140 =980 megawatts or 0.98 GW

          From the slide you can clearly see the constraint and how supply will not catch up to Demand for 'years'-it's not possible to accelerate the capacity much faster than the indicated cadence (CoWoS-L). What we can take away from this, is demand is colossal, it's not slowing and there is multi year committed growth.

          There will always be clunky quarters here and there but the trend is for QoQ revenue expansion as far ahead as one can see(into 2027)

          Screenshot 2025-05-15 at 08.33.01.png

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          • A Offline
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            Adam Kay
            Global Moderator
            wrote last edited by
            #101

            Another $200 Billion Deal

            5GW AI Data Center Complex: G42 is spearheading the development of one of the world's largest AI data centres complexes in Abu Dhabi.
            The facility is planned to span 10 square miles, initially operating with 1 gigawatt (GW) of power and eventually expanding to 5GW. This capacity is sufficient to support over 4 million next-generation Nvidia GB200 chips equivalents. The project aligns with the UAE's ambition to diversify its economy and position itself as a global AI leader.

            Total Blackwell production in 2025 is estimated to be anywhere from 4-5M

            It isn't slowing down!

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            • E Online
              E Online
              exIM
              wrote last edited by
              #102

              mmm, maybe time to diversify into 'cooling' companies 🤔

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              • A Offline
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                Adam Kay
                Global Moderator
                wrote last edited by Adam Kay
                #103

                Unfortunately prices are already very expensive. It's a capital intensive, modest margin business which is not easy to scale(without capital). I'm not so keen to pay PEs of 40+ and 25% revenue growth. There are over a dozen very big and fierce competitors too. It's a great business but it's not at a fair price imo.

                We chose Oracle because of their moat-their ERP database/clients. Mission critical data used by the biggest companies in the world and most companies. When they get into AI Oracle Cloud will get the business for one simple reason. They will not move this data to anyone else due to security, access and their very survival if something serious happens.

                Oracles enormous outstanding performance obligations (growth) proved that point well.

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                • A Adam Kay

                  Unfortunately prices are already very expensive. It's a capital intensive, modest margin business which is not easy to scale(without capital). I'm not so keen to pay PEs of 40+ and 25% revenue growth. There are over a dozen very big and fierce competitors too. It's a great business but it's not at a fair price imo.

                  We chose Oracle because of their moat-their ERP database/clients. Mission critical data used by the biggest companies in the world and most companies. When they get into AI Oracle Cloud will get the business for one simple reason. They will not move this data to anyone else due to security, access and their very survival if something serious happens.

                  Oracles enormous outstanding performance obligations (growth) proved that point well.

                  2 Offline
                  2 Offline
                  2BToo
                  wrote last edited by
                  #104

                  @Adam-Kay said in Nvidia News:

                  Unfortunately prices are already very expensive. It's a capital intensive, modest margin business which is not easy to scale(without capital). I'm not so keen to pay PEs of 40+ and 25% revenue growth. There are over a dozen very big and fierce competitors too. It's a great business but it's not at a fair price imo.

                  Sorry to be slow but can someone re-explain that paragraph using simple words? Thanks.

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                  • L Offline
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                    LastPoster
                    wrote last edited by LastPoster
                    #105

                    The infrastructure (rather than the IT) of Data Centres costs loads to build

                    I think

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                    • A Offline
                      A Offline
                      Adam Kay
                      Global Moderator
                      wrote last edited by
                      #106

                      Hi O,

                      Capital Intensive = requires investment in plant and machinery to grow revenues.

                      P/E is a quick snap shot of a companies stock price vs its earnings/share). It's not the only metric to look at obviously, but in this case it's high and if I were to pay a premium id want to see more growth and better margins.

                      A company like KLAC also requires capital to grow however they have much better margins (65%) and an almost monopoly in certain key areas. And its growth rate isn't all that different-its PE is almost half! As I said, many more things to look at. Hope this helps

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                      • A Offline
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                        Adam Kay
                        Global Moderator
                        wrote last edited by Adam Kay
                        #107

                        In an interview on CNBC last night, Elon Musk confirmed that Tesla's Optimus robot system is powered by Nvidia's Jetson Orin and Thor chips. This endorsement highlights Nvidia's critical role in Tesla's humanoid robotics, reinforcing their leadership in AI hardware and potentially boosting their stock and investor confidence

                        Notable robotics companies using NVIDIA systems:

                        Tesla

                        Siemens

                        BYD Electronics

                        Teradyne Robotics

                        Intrinsic (Alphabet)

                        Boston Dynamics

                        Agility Robotics

                        XPENG Robotics

                        Figure AI

                        Fourier Intelligence

                        Sanctuary AI

                        1X Technologies

                        Apptronik

                        Unitree

                        Addverb

                        Ati Motors

                        Ottonomy

                        Vention

                        Standard Bots

                        KUKA

                        Universal Robots

                        Foxconn

                        Waabi

                        Neura Robotics

                        Skild AI

                        Virtual Incision

                        Galbot

                        Hillbot

                        IntBot

                        Market TAM Coverage(Total Addressable Market): NVIDIA's systems are integral to a wide range of robotics applications, from humanoid robots to industrial automation and autonomous vehicles. Given the diversity and prominence of these companies across manufacturing, healthcare, logistics, and automotive sectors, NVIDIA likely captures ~80-90% of the robotics AI hardware and software market TAM.

                        Musk also mentioned his interest in acquiring UBER-no doubt for their best in place ride booking system and network (another heavy user of Nvidia drive systems).

                        The company is dominating what are clearly going to be massive markets-the future looks very bright. Robotics and autonomous vehicles.

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                        • A Offline
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                          Adam Kay
                          Global Moderator
                          wrote last edited by Adam Kay
                          #108

                          Quanta, the AI server giant, sees triple-digit growth for AI server sales this year, and said capacity is now full, media report, citing Senior VP Mike Yang: -GB300 server shipments likely to start in September, Q4 mass production -GB200 server shipments began in March -H200 servers still lead in Q1, will continue in Q2

                          Interesting Quanta are reporting their biggest seller(still) being the older architecture H200. I would have expected Hopper to now be behind Blackwell. This is good news because Hopper is in plentiful supply. Further, they are fully booked. Note: Quanta is an OEM(like Foxconn), producing generic reference designs for large CSPs called 'Big Iron'. Quite distinct from the fully custom designs demanded by the AI model operators and built by the likes of SMCI (an ODM)

                          Elon Musk said xAI plans to build a 1-million GPU facility outside Memphis, Tennessee and will buy more chips from Nvidia and AMD, and possibly others, CNBC reports, adding Musk said xAI already has “over 200,000 GPUs training coherently” at its Colossus data centre in Memphis. “A few years ago, I made a very obvious prediction, which is that the limitation on AI will be chips,” he said. This is additional GPUs which fits with the planned Grok expansion of 2M GPUs by end of 2026.

                          Malaysian Deputy Minister of Communications Teo Nie Ching said in a speech on May 19 that Malaysia would be the first to activate an unspecified class of Huawei “Ascend GPU-powered AI servers at national scale”, but a day later, on May 20, Teo’s office said it was retracting her remarks on Huawei without explanation. It is unclear whether the project will proceed as planned.

                          Maybe the US had something to do with that because it now breaks US law yo use Huawei chips-shame .

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