Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang praised TSMC for its crucial role in the company’s growth and confirmed there are no plans to sell Blackwell AI chips to China amid US export restrictions. Huang also cited strong demand and robust memory support from SK Hynix, Samsung, and Micron.
The stock was worth about $865 million when he started selling in late June, but has climbed over 40% since then amid unquenchable demand for artificial intelligence processors.
Nvidia's specially designed chips have catapulted the company to become the world's biggest by market capitalisation, with China seen as a crucial market.
“Imagine delivering the smallest supercomputer next to the biggest rocket,” Jensen Huang joked, as he shared pizza and stories with Elon Musk and SpaceX engineers.
The order, issued last month, has unsettled thousands of skilled professionals, many of whom are from India and China, who depend on the H-1B programme to work in the United States.
Elon Musk was, at the time, a co-founder of OpenAI. Years later, he left the company, launched xAI, a direct competitor, and sued OpenAI over its shift to a for-profit model.
Huang also believes in keeping teams small but powerful. He says a group of about 150 skilled researchers, with the right funding, can achieve game-changing breakthroughs.
Harsh Goenka shared a post on X referring to Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang’s early years working at a US diner before founding what is now the world’s most valuable public company.
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang says he’s created more billionaires than any other CEO. From backing small AI teams to personally reviewing employee salaries, here's how he builds powerful teams and rewards talent in surprising ways.
Despite stumbling slightly, Jensen Huang began his speech in Mandarin and said, 'I am very happy to be here'. His easy-going charm and approachable demeanor deeply resonated with Chinese fans.
At nine, Jensen Huang and his brother were sent to a boarding school in Kentucky, an institution his uncle had mistakenly believed to be prestigious. In reality, it was a school for troubled youth.
NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang reacts to MIT’s study on AI making people dumber, saying daily AI use actually sharpens his thinking skills.
Speaking at London Tech Week, Huang said programming AI no longer means learning complex coding languages like Python or C++. Instead, it now comes down to one thing everyone already knows: human language.
'I think the most surprising thing about Jensen is that he’s almost totally driven by negative emotions,' Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang's biographer Stephen Witt said.
Dell and Nvidia are expanding on their partnership of existing comprehensive AI solution, Dell AI Factory, which added 3,000 enterprise customers within first year of launch.
“AI is the operating system that will power the world forward, adding an estimated $15 trillion to the global economy by 2030,” Dell said at the Dell Tech World 2025.
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang praised Huawei’s AI progress, stating China is “not behind” the U.S. He also called for U.S. policies that boost AI competitiveness amid ongoing chip export restrictions.
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang announced a $500 billion investment in U.S. AI infrastructure, marking the company's first domestic chip manufacturing. The move aims to strengthen supply chains and meet growing AI demand.
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang said US companies must become “AI factories” producing digital models and boosting jobs at the Hill and Valley Forum; he backed onshore manufacturing amid chip export curbs.
Unlike Musk, who talks about living on Mars or creating superintelligent AI, Huang isn’t interested in dreaming up sci-fi scenarios.
The 100 billion club had 16 members at the beginning of the year. Now, it has only 13.
Huang announced new chips, including its next GPU chip Blackwell Ultra, which will be available in the second half of this year, and feature more memory than the current generation of its flagship chip Blackwell, meaning it can support larger AI models.
Collectively, Chinese AI startup DeepSeek wiped out $94 billion from the pockets of tech billionaires. Oracle's chief technology officer and billionaire Larry Ellison lost about $9 billion.
Quantum computing stocks sank nearly 40% on December 8, pausing a year-long rally, after Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang said the technology's practical use was likely two decades away.