Jensen Huang and Nvidia both saw their values hit hard Monday as investors digested the impact of Chinese AI company DeepSeek.
The great news is this success story may be far from over. Nvidia chief executive officer Jensen Huang, speaking at CES earlier this month, said AI is progressing at an "incredible pace." Considering this, where will Nvidia stock be in one year? Let's find out.
NEW YORK – The world’s 500 richest people, led by Nvidia co-founder Jensen Huang, lost a combined US$108 billion (S$145 billion) on Jan 27 as a tech-led sell-off tied to Chinese AI developer DeepSeek sent major indexes plunging.
A Chinese company’s claim of a $5.6 million artificial intelligence breakthrough wiped almost $600 billion from Nvidia’s market value on Monday, shattering Wall Street’s confidence that tech companies’ AI spending spree will continue and dealing an apparent blow to US tech leadership.
The recent AI advances by Chinese upstart DeepSeek could be the beginning of a potential nightmare scenario that Nvidia Corp. Chief Executive Jensen Huang has been worrying about since the chip ...
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang Huang said he will be celebrating Lunar New Year with employees.
Meanwhile, a slew of other tech executives including Elon Musk, Jeff Bezos and Mark Zuckerberg are reportedly set to attend the events on Monday.
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang believes data center operators will spend $1 trillion over the next four years on upgrading their infrastructure to meet demand from AI developers. Since the data center segment currently accounts for 88% of Nvidia's total revenue, that spending will be instrumental to the company's future success.
The world’s wealthiest individuals, led by Nvidia Corp.’s co-founder Jensen Huang, saw their fortunes take a staggering hit on Monday,
Nvidia called DeepSeek’s R1 model “an excellent AI advancement,” despite the Chinese startup’s emergence causing the chipmaker’s stock price to plunge 17%.
Not only is Cramer interested in energy, but the President ran his election on the promise of increasing America’s oil production and requiring oil companies to drill more. However, the CEOs that he’s spoken to “are all saying listen, we’re going to hold.”