Nvidia has surpassed $40 billion in investment commitments in 2026, backing companies across the AI infrastructure stack.
The chipmaker recently agreed to invest up to $3.2 billion in glass maker Corning and $2.1 billion in data center operator IREN.
These deals reflect a broader strategy of financing the AI supply chain while securing commercial partnerships. Analysts see both promise and risk in Nvidia’s growing investment portfolio.
Nvidia’s 2026 dealmaking pace has far outrun previous years. The company has signed at least seven multibillion-dollar deals with publicly traded firms this year.
Additionally, it has participated in roughly two dozen private company investment rounds, according to FactSet.
The IREN deal includes an agreement for the data center company to deploy up to 5 gigawatts of Nvidia’s DSX-branded infrastructure.
These facilities will power AI workloads at locations across the globe. The arrangement ties IREN’s expansion directly to Nvidia’s hardware ecosystem.
The Corning investment comes with a manufacturing commitment as well. Corning will build three new U.S. facilities dedicated to optical technologies for Nvidia. The chipmaker is shifting toward fiber-optic cables instead of copper as it develops rack-scale systems.
Earlier in 2026, Nvidia put $2 billion each into Marvell Technology, Lumentum, and Coherent. All three companies are developing silicon photonics and optical networking technologies.
Mizuho analyst Jordan Klein called these component deals “super smart by the CFO and team and a great use of cash,” adding that they help accelerate critical technologies currently in short supply.
Nvidia’s biggest individual investment this year was a $30 billion commitment to OpenAI. The two companies have worked together for over a decade, with ties deepening since the launch of ChatGPT in 2022. CEO Jensen Huang described the relationship as a long-standing strategic partnership.
During an April podcast appearance, Huang explained Nvidia’s approach to backing AI companies. “There are so many great, amazing foundation model companies, and we try to invest in all of them,” he said.
“We don’t pick winners. We need to support everyone.” Nvidia also joined funding rounds for Anthropic and Elon Musk’s xAI before its merger with SpaceX in February.
Wedbush Securities analyst Matthew Bryson noted that Nvidia’s investments fit “squarely into the circular investment theme” driving market durability concerns. However, he also sees the deals building a competitive moat if Nvidia executes well.
Klein, on the other hand, was more direct about neocloud investments, saying, “It smells like you are pre-funding the purchase of your own GPUs and products.”
Ben Bajarin at Creative Strategies flagged a longer-term concern regarding demand sustainability. “The risk is that if the cycle turns, the market starts questioning how much of the demand was organic versus supported by Nvidia’s own balance sheet,” he told CNBC.
Meanwhile, on Nvidia’s last earnings call, Huang stated, “Our investments are focused very squarely, strategically on expanding and deepening our ecosystem reach.” Nvidia’s non-marketable equity securities grew to $22.25 billion by January 2026, up sharply from $3.39 billion a year earlier.
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