Articles Tagged: gpu

2 articles found

Inside the $100B OpenAI–NVIDIA Pact: Chips, Compute, and the New Economics of Model Building

NVIDIA’s pledge to invest up to $100 billion in OpenAI, tied to a 10-gigawatt buildout of AI supercomputing, is not just another mega-deal—it is the capital markets’ clearest signal yet that compute is the strategic high ground of artificial intelligence. The architecture is unusually explicit: money arrives in $10 billion tranches, capacity arrives in gigawatts, and the first phase targets the second half of 2026 on NVIDIA’s next-generation Vera Rubin systems. OpenAI positions NVIDIA as a preferred, not exclusive, supplier across chips and networking, preserving leverage with other partners while concentrating on the stack that currently defines frontier AI performance. The stakes extend well beyond a bilateral relationship. A 10 GW program equates to roughly 4–5 million GPUs—about NVIDIA’s total expected shipments this year—and it forces hard choices about energy, siting, and financing. The pact reverberated immediately in markets, with NVIDIA shares rallying on the announcement and broader indices hitting fresh highs. Behind the pop is a recalibration of AI’s cost structure: concentrated access to compute becomes a moat, training throughput becomes the new velocity metric, and the economics of inference compress toward power, density, and interconnect performance. This article dissects the capital stack, engineering constraints, chip and cloud implications, and policy risks that will determine whether this bet on scale earns the returns its size implies.

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Oracle’s AI Build-Out Has Rewired Its Valuation: What the Stock’s Surge Prices In—and What Must Still Be Proven

In the six weeks leading into August, Oracle’s share price climbed nearly 19%, closing at $250.05 on Friday, August 8, up from roughly $210 at the end of June, according to Yahoo Finance. The rally crested intraday at a fresh 52-week high of $260.87 on July 31, placing Oracle among the most visible beneficiaries of the market’s AI infrastructure trade. Behind the price action sits a striking capital expenditure cycle: free cash flow turned negative in the fiscal fourth quarter as Oracle accelerated data center build-outs tied to AI demand, SEC filings show for Q4 FY2025 (quarter ended May 31, 2025). That combination—rising price, rising capex, and the promise of AI-driven cloud growth—has transformed how investors value a software stalwart now trading as a capacity-constrained infrastructure provider in transition. Yet, the filings also reveal leverage, working-capital tightness, and margins that have not visibly expanded despite the hype, complicating the bull case. This article synthesizes recent filings, valuation metrics, and trading dynamics to examine what the market is discounting in Oracle’s AI growth story—and what still needs to show up in the numbers.

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