Did Nvidia Just Say "Checkmate" to Rivals?

In This Article:

Key Points

Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA) built an empire in what could be today's most promising technology: artificial intelligence (AI). It all started with a powerful chip -- the graphics processing unit (GPU) -- which is designed to rapidly handle specific types of computing problems: those that can be easily broken down into a large set of smaller problems that can solved simultaneously.

Initially, Nvidia sold this product to the gaming market, because producing high-resolution, fast-moving video game graphics is just the sort of task that parallel processors are made for. But over time, the tech world found other uses for GPUs. And eventually, when AI started really taking off, it became clear that they were the best hardware available for the training and inferencing of AI models.

With the best GPUs on the market and a highly popular platform for developers, Nvidia rapidly became the No. 1 AI chip designer and developed a wide range of products and services to enhance its status as the go-to purveyor of AI hardware.

Still, one threat that Nvidia continues to face is the emergence of rivals, from fellow chip designer Advanced Micro Devices to some of its own big tech customers, which are designing their own AI chips. Competitive offerings from these players could put pressure on Nvidia's prices and slow its red-hot growth.

But Chief Executive Officer Jensen Huang, speaking at Computex (a computer industry expo in Taiwan) earlier this week, announced a key new release from the company -- something that could greatly reduce its risk of losing meaningful market share to those would-be challengers. Did Nvidia just say "checkmate" to its rivals?

The letters AI are written in a cloud image in a data center.
Image source: Getty Images.

Nvidia's record revenue

First, a quick summary of the Nvidia story so far. The company has shifted its GPU focus from video games to AI, and added a multitude of related products. All of this has resulted in massive revenue growth. It increased its quarterly revenues by rates in the double- and triple-digit percentages year over year, with these figures setting new records steadily. And, importantly, its top-line growth came at a high level of profitability, with gross margin surpassing 70%.

But other chipmakers released competitive products at lower prices and Nvidia customers like Amazon and Meta Platforms have spoken about their own in-house developed chips. For example, Amazon Web Services (AWS), sells (and rents cloud computing time on servers powered by) its own Trainium chip, a product it says its cost-conscious customers appreciate.