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Nvidia News

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    Adam Kay
    Global Moderator
    wrote on last edited by
    #278

    Shares in Corning jumped more than 14% in premarket trading after it announced a major long-term partnership with Nvidia aimed at massively scaling optical connectivity. The deal is pretty significant, with plans to boost capacity tenfold, which says a lot about just how fast demand for AI infrastructure is growing.

    As part of the agreement, the companies will build three new manufacturing plants in the US, creating over 3,000 well-paid jobs. Corning will also expand its fibre production capacity by more than 50%, helping meet the needs of hyperscale data centres that rely on fast, efficient connectivity to run Nvidia’s advanced computing systems.

    Jensen Huang framed the move as part of a broader shift, calling AI the biggest infrastructure buildout of our time. Meanwhile, Corning boss Wendell Weeks highlighted the manufacturing angle, stressing that this isn’t just about tech innovation but also about rebuilding industrial capacity.

    In simplistic terms-Optical fibre sends data as light, allowing far higher bandwidth and much lower signal loss than copper. It carries more data over longer distances with minimal interference. Latency is lower in practice, and scaling is easier. Copper is fine short-range, but optics handles massive, high-speed data loads far better.

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      Adam Kay
      Global Moderator
      wrote last edited by
      #279

      A post from the past-Nov 2025-we speculated that their revenue tempo QoQ would be close to +$10B (and +$15 when Rubin starts ramping H2)
      Screenshot 2026-05-12 at 16.09.06.png

      Last Q $68B (our bull case was $70B)

      Citi today re Q1
      "We model ~$1.4B upside in the Apr-Q with sales reaching $80B versus the Street's $78.6B on stronger-than-expected B300 ramp," Citi analysts said in a Tuesday investor note. "Looking into the Jul-Q, we expect an 11% Q/Q sales uptick to $89B versus the Street's $87B on continued ramp of B300 as reflected by the faster-than-expected 1.6T transceiver shipments."

      Nvidia is trading at a PE of 22 ish and a PEG of 0.5. AMD is trading at a PE of 60 and a PEG of 2. Imo, one is undervalued and one is over valued.

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        Adam Kay
        Global Moderator
        wrote last edited by
        #280

        Just my opinion but I do expect some concrete movement on China's ability to use American silicon, coming out of the trade summit-today is the second day of negotiations.

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          Adam Kay
          Global Moderator
          wrote last edited by
          #281

          Worth a watch if you have X. https://x.com/elonmusk/status/2056179413901877551?s=20

          And for context, Citadel is one of the world’s largest and most influential financial firms. Its hedge fund business manages more than US$60 billion in assets under management, making it among the biggest alternative investment managers globally.

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            Adam Kay
            Global Moderator
            wrote last edited by
            #282

            Nvidia report tonight. My call:

            $80B+ and $45B net income which equates circa $1.80 EPS. I think the guide will be close to $90B for next quarter(May through July).

            We will receive updates on Rubin/Vera Rubin

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              exIM
              wrote last edited by
              #283

              Good call 💪

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                Adam Kay
                Global Moderator
                wrote last edited by Adam Kay
                #284

                Those are normal operational numbers. Non gaap including exceptional etc was 58b. There was a $15b revaluation (upwards) which would be related to one of their investments-listed I would think, prob Coreweave.

                Operating cashflow +$50B

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                  Adam Kay
                  Global Moderator
                  wrote last edited by Adam Kay
                  #285

                  NVIDIA just delivered numbers that barely seem real. Revenue hit roughly $81.6b for the quarter, up 85% year-on-year, with data centre revenue alone at $75.2bn. Guidance for next quarter came in at around $91bn — comfortably ahead of expectations. Gross margins are still sitting around 75%, which at this scale is almost absurd.

                  This is arguably the most staggering earnings print corporate America has ever seen in absolute dollar creation. The key point is not just the growth rate — it is the combination of hypergrowth and elite profitability.

                  Most companies can do one or the other. NVIDIA is doing both simultaneously at a scale previously associated with oil majors or sovereign economies.
                  The market was worried margins would crack as Blackwell ramps and competition intensifies. Instead, management effectively said margins around the mid-70s are sustainable even while revenue accelerates towards a $350b+ annualised run rate. That changes the entire valuation debate.
                  Jensen Huang’s framing was telling: this is no longer about selling chips; it is about building “AI factories” and becoming the infrastructure layer for the next computing era. Hyperscalers are still spending aggressively, inference demand is exploding, and sovereign AI buildouts are only starting.
                  At this point the bear case is no longer “AI demand collapses”. The only credible concerns are geopolitical restrictions, customer concentration, or eventually the law of large numbers. But right now, the numbers keep overwhelming every attempt to call the peak.

                  Management approved an additional $80b share buy back, which now totally $140b. The dividend was also raised 2,400% to 25c

                  Screenshot 2026-05-21 at 05.39.20.png

                  NB-Look at the growth. 85% on revenue and 140% on EPS. Massive operating leverage too. JA sub 20 Fwd PE. Perhaps 18.

                  Earnings call highlights:

                  Main Takeaways From NVIDIA Earnings
                  Revenue growth was massive — again
                  NVIDIA posted another record quarter:
                  Revenue reached $82B, up 85% year-over-year and 20% sequentially
                  This was the company’s 14th consecutive quarter of sequential growth
                  Free cash flow came in at $49B
                  Data Centre revenue alone was $75B

                  Management said demand for AI infrastructure continues to accelerate globally.
                  Blackwell demand is exploding
                  The dominant theme of the call:
                  Demand for Blackwell systems has gone effectively vertical.
                  Management stated:
                  Blackwell is the fastest product ramp in company history
                  Hyperscalers and frontier model companies are deploying hundreds of thousands of GPUs
                  GB300 demand is exceptionally strong
                  Blackwell now powers or supports nearly every major frontier AI lab
                  They repeatedly stressed that inference demand — not only training — is now driving enormous spending.
                  NVIDIA says “AI factories” are the new data centres
                  A major change in positioning:
                  NVIDIA no longer frames GPUs as standalone chips.

                  Instead:

                  Customers are building “AI factories”
                  The important metric is no longer GPU purchase price
                  It is:
                  token throughput
                  token cost
                  utilisation
                  energy efficiency
                  lifetime economics
                  Jensen Huang essentially argued that compute capacity is now directly linked to revenue generation.
                  Their thesis:

                  More compute = more AI output = more customer revenue.
                  They believe AI infrastructure becomes a multi-trillion-dollar market
                  One of the boldest claims:
                  Hyperscaler CapEx could exceed $1T annually by 2027
                  Total AI infrastructure spending could reach $3T–$4T per year by the end of the decade

                  Management believes AI is shifting from optional software enhancement to essential infrastructure across nearly every industry.
                  NVIDIA is changing how it reports the business
                  The company reorganised reporting into:

                  1. Hyperscale
                    Public cloud giants and major consumer internet firms.
                  2. ACIE
                    (AI cloud, industrial, enterprise)
                    This includes:

                  sovereign AI projects
                  AI-native clouds
                  enterprise deployments
                  industrial AI systems
                  Management strongly implied this second category could eventually surpass hyperscalers in size.
                  Jensen’s central argument: NVIDIA wins because it owns the whole stack
                  Huang spent a large portion of the call reinforcing this point.
                  NVIDIA claims its advantage is not merely GPUs, but:

                  chips
                  networking
                  software
                  CUDA ecosystem
                  system integration
                  rack-scale infrastructure
                  deployment tooling
                  He described NVIDIA as the only company delivering a fully integrated AI platform across hyperscale, enterprise, sovereign AI, robotics, and edge computing.
                  Vera CPU was a major surprise
                  Possibly the most underappreciated part of the call.
                  NVIDIA now believes CPUs become critical in agentic AI systems.

                  Why?

                  Because:

                  agents orchestrate tasks on CPUs
                  tools, browsers, memory systems, and workflows run on CPUs
                  GPUs still perform the “thinking”, but CPUs coordinate everything
                  They introduced:
                  Vera CPU
                  A custom ARM-based CPU tightly integrated with Rubin GPUs.
                  Claims included:

                  1.5x faster per core
                  2x performance per watt
                  4x rack density versus x86 alternatives
                  Most striking statement:
                  NVIDIA sees nearly $20B in standalone CPU revenue this year.
                  That represents a substantial expansion beyond GPUs.
                  Rubin is arriving quickly
                  Rubin shipments begin in Q3.

                  NVIDIA says Rubin could deliver:

                  up to 35x higher inference throughput
                  up to 10x greater AI factory revenue versus Blackwell
                  Huang also claimed:
                  every major frontier AI lab is expected to adopt Rubin
                  Rubin adoption could exceed Blackwell adoption
                  Inference is now the centre of the AI race
                  Another major shift in messaging.
                  The company repeatedly stated:

                  AI has evolved from:
                  one-shot inference
                  → reasoning
                  → agentic AI
                  They now view inference as the dominant long-term compute market.
                  Jensen specifically said NVIDIA is rapidly gaining inference market share.

                  Physical AI and robotics are becoming meaningful businesses
                  Edge computing revenue reached $6.4B.
                  They highlighted:

                  robotics
                  autonomous vehicles
                  AI-powered telecoms networks
                  industrial systems
                  robotaxis
                  The company said physical AI generated more than $9B in revenue over the last 12 months.
                  China remains largely absent
                  Important detail:
                  NVIDIA said it is not including China data centre revenue in guidance because export restrictions remain uncertain.

                  So current forecasts exclude potential China upside.

                  Capital returns increased sharply
                  NVIDIA announced:
                  dividend increase from $0.01 to $0.25
                  new $80B buyback authorisation
                  target to return roughly 50% of free cash flow to shareholders
                  That is a major signal of confidence.
                  Guidance exceeded expectations
                  Next quarter guidance:
                  Revenue: $91B ±2%
                  Gross margins around 75%
                  Management also reiterated confidence in:
                  $1 trillion of Blackwell + Rubin revenue between 2025–2027.
                  That figure clearly surprised analysts.
                  Jensen’s underlying message
                  The entire call essentially boiled down to this-NVIDIA no longer sees itself as:**

                  a GPU company
                  or even simply a semiconductor company

                  It sees itself as:
                  the operating system of the AI economy
                  the infrastructure layer beneath agentic AI
                  the default platform for frontier AI models
                  And Jensen clearly believes AI compute demand is still in the early stages — not near the peak.
                  That is why the tone of the call was unusually aggressive, even by NVIDIA standards.

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                    Adam Kay
                    Global Moderator
                    wrote last edited by Adam Kay
                    #286

                    Did Nvidia suggest they alone would buy all the memory?

                    On today’s conference call, NVIDIA stated that it expects the standalone Vera CPU market to reach $20 billion in FY2027.

                    The unit price of Grace CPU is estimated at around $3,000–$5,000. Since Vera is the successor to Grace and is optimised for AI agentic workloads, we expect Vera to carry a higher ASP of roughly $5,000–$8,000 per unit.

                    Assuming a Vera CPU ASP of $8,000, a $20 billion market would imply 2.5 million CPUs.

                    It remains unclear whether standalone Vera CPU sales will include the same SoCAMM capacity as NVL72. However, assuming the same capacity is applied, each Vera CPU would have 8 SoCAMM slots. Assuming 192GB per module, SoCAMM capacity per Vera CPU would be 1,536GB.

                    Therefore, FY2027 SoCAMM demand for Vera CPU would be:

                    2.5 million CPUs × 1,536GB = 3.84 billion GB, or 30.72 billion Gb.

                    CY2026, which broadly overlaps with NVIDIA’s FY2027, SoCAMM supply from the three major DRAM makers is estimated at 30 billion Gb. Therefore, combined SoCAMM demand from NVIDIA’s standalone Vera CPU sales and VR NVL72 sales already appears likely to exceed the annual (global)supply capacity of 30 billion Gb.

                    Assuming CY2027 VR NVL72 shipments of 100,000 servers, we estimated the SoCAMM TAM at 44 billion Gb based on 192GB modules. If additional SoCAMM demand from standalone Vera CPU sales is added, the CY2027 SoCAMM TAM could exceed 80 billion Gb.

                    An annual 80 billion Gb of LPDDR5 would be nearly equivalent to the annual LPDDR5 TAM used for smartphones.

                    The shortage of LPDDR5 — and of DRAM overall — is likely to intensify further over time.

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                      Adam Kay
                      Global Moderator
                      wrote last edited by Adam Kay
                      #287

                      Beyond the precious. Price $7-$8M which includes circa $1.3M in 'memory'. It's early! Each rack requires 20.7 TB of HBM4. Micron is in 'mass production' phase-all sold out until 2028 at least

                      Screenshot 2026-05-31 at 09.20.33.png

                      Screenshot 2026-05-31 at 09.20.48.png

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                        Adam Kay
                        Global Moderator
                        wrote last edited by
                        #288

                        Uber, Autobrains, and NVIDIA are teaming up to launch a robotaxi pilot in Munich (pending approval).

                        Uber brings the ride-hailing platform, Autobrains provides the self-driving software, and NVIDIA supplies the DRIVE Hyperion hardware that supports Level 4 autonomous driving.

                        Level 4 basically means the car can handle all driving within a defined area without human input, but it still operates within limits like mapped regions or specific conditions. No driver needed in those zones, but it’s not fully “anywhere, anytime” autonomy yet.

                        The big idea here is scale: instead of one company building a closed system, they’re pushing an OEM-agnostic setup where different car manufacturers can plug into the same stack and join Uber’s network.

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                          Adam Kay
                          Global Moderator
                          wrote last edited by
                          #289

                          Headline-Cathie Wood loads up on Nvidia, cuts AMD across flagship ARK funds.

                          Cathie sold out of Nvidia before the run in 2023 and spent the next 2.5 years calling it over valued -she sold at between $14-$20 and now she 'loads up'.

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                            exIM
                            wrote last edited by
                            #290

                            It does beggar belief, not only her strategies, but the billions of $ investors are happy to put in her 'pot' !

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