The Top Tech Stock Winners From Trump's $600 Billion Saudi Arabian Deal

In This Article:

Key Points

  • Nvidia and AMD look poised to be the biggest winners from the recent Saudi Arabia announcement.

  • The kingdom plans to buy a lot of chips from both companies to help power its AI ambitions.

  • The deal should help both companies recoup some lost Chinese revenue.

  • These 10 stocks could mint the next wave of millionaires ›

Following a visit to Saudi Arabia last week, President Donald Trump announced that the kingdom has pledged to invest $600 billion in deals with U.S. companies. The agreement includes $142 billion in defense sales to help supply the country with "state-of-the-art warfighting equipment."

However, the two biggest winners are U.S. chipmakers Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA) and Advanced Micro Devices (NASDAQ: AMD). Following Trump's announcement, both companies revealed deals to provide chips to Humain, a Saudi Arabian artificial intelligence (AI) start-up owned by the kingdom's public investment fund.

Artist rendering of AI chip.
Image source: Getty Images.

Helping replace lost Chinese revenue

Nvidia announced it will supply Humain with several hundred thousand of its most advanced graphics processing units (GPUs) over the next five years to help power the AI data centers the company will begin building in Saudi Arabia. It will begin by shipping 18,000 of its GB300 Grace Blackwell AI supercomputer chips, while it will also provide InfiniBand networking equipment.

In addition, the Saudi Data & AI Authority (SDAIA) will deploy up to 5,000 Blackwell GPUs to help enable smart city solutions. Nvidia will also help train thousands of developers in the country and deploy the country's first Omniverse Cloud to simulate and test physical AI solutions.

Bank of America analysts estimated that the deal could be worth between $15 billion to $20 billion in total spending over the length of the agreement. That would equal $3 billion to $5 billion in annual sales.

In addition, the U.S. is reportedly close to easing chip export restrictions on the United Arab Emirates. The deal would let the nation import 500,000 advanced AI chips a year through at least 2027. About 20% of the chips would go to Abu Dhabi AI company G42, with the rest distributed to U.S. companies building data centers in the country.

The deals should help replace some of the company's lost revenue to China, after the U.S. tightened export controls to the country. China accounted for about $17 billion of Nvidia's revenue last fiscal year, but it said it was down to mid-single digits of its data center revenue in fiscal Q4. Based on its Q4 run rate, that would be about $7 billion a year.