Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang addressed confusion surrounding his company’s investment plans for OpenAI during remarks to reporters in Taipei over the weekend. The clarification came after reports suggested internal doubts had stalled a proposed $100 billion partnership.
NVIDIA Corporation, NVDA
The original agreement outlined plans to progressively fund and deploy at least 10 gigawatts of AI data centers using Nvidia systems. That announcement sent ripples through the AI industry as one of the most substantial proposed investments in the sector.
A Wall Street Journal report on Friday claimed the investment plan had stalled. The report cited Nvidia insiders who expressed doubts about the agreement’s structure. According to the WSJ, Huang had privately told business associates the original agreement wasn’t binding or finalized.
The report also said Huang criticized OpenAI’s business approach as lacking discipline. He reportedly expressed concerns about competition from Google and Anthropic, which receive backing from Alphabet and Amazon respectively.
Huang did not provide a specific dollar amount. He said it would be up to Altman to announce the total being raised.
The investment discussions have raised eyebrows in the financial community. Nvidia sells advanced AI chips to OpenAI, creating what some analysts view as a circular investment pattern.
Investors are questioning whether these arrangements artificially inflate demand. Tech companies investing in AI businesses that primarily purchase their own products creates a feedback loop that complicates valuation assessments.
Neither Nvidia nor OpenAI immediately responded to requests for comment from Seeking Alpha following the weekend remarks.
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