The Los Angeles Post
U.S. World Business Lifestyle
Today: April 17, 2025
Today: April 17, 2025

Nvidia CEO says company has not been asked to buy a stake in Intel

Nvidia GPU Technology Conference (GTC) at the SAP Center in San Jose
March 19, 2025

By Stephen Nellis and Max A. Cherney

SAN JOSE, California (Reuters) -Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang said on Wednesday that his company had not been approached about purchasing a stake in Intel.

During a press conference at Nvidia's annual developer conference in San Jose, California, Huang was asked whether Nvidia was part of a consortium with Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co to buy Intel.

"Nobody's invited us to a consortium," Huang said. "Nobody invited me. Maybe other people are involved, but I don't know. There might be a party. I wasn't invited."

Reuters earlier this month reported that TSMC had approached Nvidia, Broadcom and Advanced Micro Devices about taking stakes in a joint venture that would operate Intel's factories. Other media had previously reported that Intel, with backing from U.S. President Donald Trump, was considering a plan to separate its manufacturing operations and turn over control of them to a consortium that would include TSMC.

Intel and Nvidia shares were both flat in after-hours trading after Huang's remarks.

Earlier in the day during a question-and-answer session with financial analysts, Huang said orders for some 3.6 million of Nvidia's flagship Blackwell chips from four top cloud service providers "under represented" demand, since they did not include orders from key customer Meta Platforms and smaller cloud providers and startups.

Facebook-owner Meta is among the largest buyers of Nvidia chips and Mark Zuckerberg, CEO of the social media giant, said early last year the company planned to use Blackwell chips to train the company's open-source large language Llama models.

Meta has said it expects to spend up to $65 billion in AI infrastructure this year, a large chunk of which is expected to go toward Nvidia chips, mirroring similar commitments from other big tech giants as they race to develop the best AI products.

Huang has been trying to allay investor concerns surrounding demand for the pricey AI chips that have made Nvidia one of the world's most valuable firms, after China's DeepSeek made a competitive chatbot with allegedly fewer AI chips.

"The good news is that the understanding of R1 was completely wrong," Huang said on Wednesday, referring to DeepSeek's AI model.

DeepSeek's focus on reasoning - the ability of an AI system to make inferences - will increase the need for computation, helping drive demand for Nvidia chips, Huang said.

Nvidia's shares were up nearly 2% after the analyst call. They fell 3.4% on Tuesday, when investors were unconvinced by Huang's pitch that the company was well-positioned to respond to a pivot in the AI market as businesses shift from training AI models to getting detailed answers from them.

ONSHORING PRODUCTION

In response to an analyst's questions on the impact of higher tariffs under Trump, Huang said Nvidia sees little short-term impact but would move production to the United States in the longer term.

He gave no timeline.

TSMC , the world's biggest contract maker of chips, has said it plans to make a fresh $100 billion investment in the U.S. that involves building five additional chip facilities.

"We're in it," Huang said, referring to TSMC's new chip fabrication facility in Arizona. "We are now running production silicon in Arizona."

Reuters reported in December that TSMC was in discussions with Nvidia to produce its Blackwell chips at the company's new plant in Arizona.

(Reporting by Max A. Cherney and Stephen Nellis in San Jose, California and Arsheeya Bajwa and Zaheer Kachwala in Bengaluru; Editing by Anil D'Silva, Sayantani Ghosh, Pooja Desai and Richard Chang)

Related Articles

Nvidia CEO to defend AI dominance as competition intensifies Nvidia faces a reckoning as Chinese upstart raises questions about Wall Street's darling Nvidia CEO says company has plans for desktop chip designed with MediaTek Nvidia unveils robot training tech, new gaming chips and Toyota deal
Share This

Popular

Business|Economy|Environment|Political|Technology

China dominates solar. Trump tariffs target China. For US solar industry, that means higher costs

China dominates solar. Trump tariffs target China. For US solar industry, that means higher costs
Business|Economy|Fashion and Beauty|Political|World

Russian barriers to re-entry stymie prospects of Western companies' return

Russian barriers to re-entry stymie prospects of Western companies' return
Business|Economy|Finance|Stock Markets|US

Charles Schwab's profit surges as tariff uncertainty fuels strong trading activity

Charles Schwab's profit surges as tariff uncertainty fuels strong trading activity
Business|Economy|Finance|Stock Markets|US

Huntington's Q1 profit rises as Fed rate cuts temper deposit costs

Huntington's Q1 profit rises as Fed rate cuts temper deposit costs

Economy

Business|Economy|US

US weekly jobless claims fall as labor market remains stable

US weekly jobless claims fall as labor market remains stable
Business|Economy|Finance|Stock Markets|US

State Street's quarterly profit jumps 39% on strong fee income, lower expenses

State Street's quarterly profit jumps 39% on strong fee income, lower expenses
Asia|Business|Economy|Finance|Political

CEO of Singapore's DBS tells businesses to 'buckle up' for tariff uncertainty

CEO of Singapore's DBS tells businesses to 'buckle up' for tariff uncertainty
Business|Economy|Political|US

US single-family housing starts tumble to an eight-month low in March

US single-family housing starts tumble to an eight-month low in March

Access this article for free.

Already have an account? Sign In