NVIDIA Regains Momentum on AI Growth: ETFs to Tap

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After being beaten down in December, NVIDIA NVDA regained its glory at the start of 2025. The stock surged to a new all-time high after its server partner, Foxconn, announced record Q4 revenues and a strong sales forecast, which boosted optimism for AI-fueled growth.

Several AI-centric announcements by NVIDIA at the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas will further drive the stock higher. Investors seeking to capitalize on the growth story could invest in ETFs having the largest allocation to the AI chipmaker. These include Strive U.S. Semiconductor ETF SHOC, Columbia Semiconductor and Technology ETF SEMI, VanEck Vectors Semiconductor ETF SMH, YieldMax Target 12 Semiconductor Option Income ETF SOXY and VanEck Fabless Semiconductor ETF SMHX.

AI Launches at CES

At CES, NVIDIA’s chief executive officer Jensen Huang announced a raft of new chips, software and services, aiming to stay at the forefront of artificial intelligence computing.

Huang debuted the latest generation of graphics processors for desktop and laptop gaming systems, dubbed the GeForce RTX 50 Series. The series includes RTX 5090, RTX 5080, RTX 5070 Ti and RTX 5070. The flagship RTX 5090 and RTX 5080 models will be available later this month for $1,999 and $999, respectively. RTX 5070, costing $549 and RTX 5070 Ti, costing $749, will debut in February. This is the first time that NVIDIA has released a titanium edition card (read: Palantir vs. NVIDIA ETFs: Better AI Plays for 2025?). 

Huang said AI is moving from the current generative AI phase to an "agentic AI" phase where software and devices work on behalf of users. The logical progression for agentic AI is to move from software agents to autonomous machines or physical AI operating in the real world. At CES 2025, the AI chip leader launched NVIDIA Cosmos, a computing platform for accelerating physical AI development. Cosmos offers world foundation models to help developers make next-generation autonomous vehicles and robots.

Finally, NVIDIA announced a high-end personal computer called Project Digits, powered by its Nvidia GB10 Grace Blackwell Superchip and running the Linux-based Nvidia DGX operating system. The system will come preconfigured with NVIDIA’s AI software stack. The new PC is expected to start at $3,000 and will be available in May from NVIDIA and its hardware partners. It will be marketed to AI researchers, data scientists and students. With NVIDIA Project Digits, developers can run up to 200-billion-parameter large language models for AI applications.