NVIDIA, AI and Jensen Huang
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After a blistering share rally that for a time made Nvidia Corp. the world’s most valuable company, investors have become more wary of pouring more money into the chipmaker, aware that the adoption of artificial intelligence computing won’t be a straight path,
It turns out that Nvidia actually stepped in to support the IPO. In Nvidia's first-quarter 13F filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission, Nvidia reported owning close to 24.2 million shares, up from the 17.9 million shares it owned previously, according to CoreWeave's prospectus.
While wider markets have risen after China and the U.S. declared a 90-day halt on tariffs, which is considered a step toward de-escalating the global trade conflict,
NVIDIA also unveiled the first update to Isaac GR00T, its foundation AI model for humanoid robots, designed to help them learn and adapt in real time. The latest version, Isaac GR00T N1.5, includes GR00T-Dreams, a simulation tool that creates virtual training environments to accelerate robotic learning.
CoreWeave ( CRWV 18.79%) is the hottest new artificial intelligence stock on the market. The company held its initial public offering (IPO) in March 2025. The stock started trading at $39 per share but has since risen 130% to $90 per share.
U.S. export controls on artificial intelligence chips to China were "a failure" as they have cost American companies billions of dollars in lost sales, Nvidia Chief Executive Jensen Huang said on Wednesday.
Nvidia is planning to build Taiwan’s first AI supercomputer while deepening partnerships with local heavyweights Foxconn and TSMC.
Nvidia will disclose its fiscal first-quarter earnings report after the close next Wednesday, May 28. Nvidia earnings have become one of Wall Street's most anticipated events than
Nvidia plans to sell a technology that will tie chips together to speed up the chip-to-chip communication needed to build and deploy artificial intelligence tools, it said on Monday.