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Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailNVIDIA's earnings report sparks massive market anticipation, with analysts focusing on AI growth and 2025's potential. Beth Kindig, Tech Analyst at I/O Fund, and Gunjan Banerji, Lead Writer at The Wall Street Journal, discuss NVIDIA's strong growth, its impact on AI, and its potential to move the broader market.
Persons: Beth Kindig, Gunjan Organizations: Tech, Wall Street
Blackwell chips are key for AI development, promising improved speed over Nvidia predecessors. The chips are also considered a key growth driver for Nvidia, with one analyst previously likening Blackwell to an iPhone moment. Last month, Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang told CNBC that "demand for Blackwell is insane" and separately said that Blackwell is sold out for the next 12 months. AdvertisementNvidia has already delayed shipment of the next-generation AI chips by a quarter after The Information reported in August that it had design flaws. SoftBank is the first customer to use Nvidia's Blackwell chips, the companies said at Nvidia's AI summit in Japan last week.
Persons: Blackwell, Hopper, Jensen Huang, Beth Kindig, Huang, Nvidia's Blackwell Organizations: Nvidia, Companies, CNBC, Amazon Web, Meta, Microsoft, Reuters, Business Locations: TSMC, Japan
Nvidia stock still has 50% upside, according to Rosenblatt analyst Hans Mosesmann. That's according to Rosenblatt semiconductor analyst Hans Mosesmann, who increased his Nvidia price target to a street-high $200 per share on Tuesday. But going forward, the real profit story for Nvidia isn't in its hardware-focused GPU business, but rather in its software business, which is spearheaded by Nvidia's popular CUDA platform. Right now, Nvidia's hardware business is going through an unprecedented boom period. Mosesmann's bullishness on Nvidia's software platform was echoed by I/O Fund Tech analyst Beth Kindig last month.
Persons: Rosenblatt, Hans Mosesmann, Mosesmann, , Hopper, Blackwell, Rubin, Beth Kindig, Kindig Organizations: Nvidia, Service, Rosenblatt, Nvidia isn't, O Fund Tech
The ongoing AI boom helped catapult Nvidia's market valuation to $3.014 trillion. With Nvidia now bigger than Apple, the AI chip maker is just slightly behind Microsoft as the world's biggest company. Nvidia's valuation was just above $950 billion a year-ago and was about $400 billion in November 2022 when OpenAI first released ChatGPT to the public. Apple held a market valuation of $3.00 trillion Wednesday afternoon, or about $15 billion below Nvidia's current valuation. With Apple surpassed, Nvidia is behind only Microsoft, which is the world's most valuable company with a market capitalization of $3.15 trillion.
Persons: , OpenAI, Beth Kindig, Kindig Organizations: Nvidia, Apple, Microsoft, world's, Service, Fund
"The company made a massive switch in its consumer mix," said Sandeep Rao, a senior researcher at Leverage Shares, an investment management company. As for competition, even if Nvidia's contenders appear weak, more entrants will grab market share. Beth Kindig, the CEO and lead tech analyst for the I/O Fund, estimates that AMD's market share could reach 20%. Nvidia and AMD have similar production costs since neither makes their GPUs but uses the same supplier, Taiwan Semiconductor (TSMC). "So AMD is a little bit behind in terms of performance," Rao said.
Persons: Sandeep Rao, corporates, Rao, Nvidia's, Blackwell, Rubin, AMD'sRadeon, Beth Kindig, Nvidia's Blackwell Organizations: Service, Apple, Microsoft, Business, Nvidia, Semiconductor, Nvidia Investors, AMD, Taiwan Semiconductor, Intel, Baidu Locations: China, India
Kindig: Nvidia is heading towards a $10 trillion market cap
  + stars: | 2024-05-28 | by ( ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: 1 min
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailKindig: Nvidia is heading towards a $10 trillion market capBeth Kindig, Lead Tech Analyst at the I/O Fund, discusses Nvidia's market-cap outlook following its stock surge last week.
Persons: Beth Kindig Organizations: Nvidia, Lead
That's according to I/O Fund tech analyst Beth Kindig, who said Nvidia has a massive moat around its business. Kindig said the next leg of growth for Nvidia will come from its CUDA software platform. AdvertisementNvidia stock will surge 258% from current levels and hit a $10 trillion market valuation by 2030, according to I/O Fund tech analyst Beth Kindig. This is very, very early for Nvidia," Kindig told CNBC on Tuesday. "The CUDA software platform is what developers learn on.
Persons: Beth Kindig, Kindig, , Nvidia's, Blackwell, Kindig's, They're Organizations: Nvidia, Blackwell, Fund, Service, CNBC, AMD, Intel, Amazon
The money management giant is looking for a new Washington, DC-based head of US government affairs and public policy as well as a new head of state government affairs, wrote John Kelly, BlackRock's global head of corporate affairs, in a previously unreported company memo last week. The overhaul, which includes reshuffling positions and a renamed government affairs and public policy group, reflects the tremendous pressure BlackRock is under in the public eye. Reshaping the key policy groupA string of roles in the public policy group are changing to meet this new reality. The firm's public policy group has about 40 people, some 25 of whom are on Cound's team focused on international policy. Novick launched the firm's public policy efforts in 2009.
Persons: John Kelly, BlackRock's, Kelly, BlackRock, Larry Fink, Fink, Samantha DeZur, Joanna Cound, Rachel Barry, Kate Fulton, Bryan Wood, Barbara Novick, Rob Kapito, Susan Wagner, Novick, Sheila Kindig, Jim Badenhausen, Kindig Organizations: BlackRock, Business, Republican Party, Texas Republicans, Bloomberg Locations: BlackRock, Washington, DC, Florida , Texas , Louisiana, South Carolina
In this videoShare Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailThe Fed's tone on interest rates has been 'brutal' for tech companies like Apple, says analystBeth Kindig of I/O Fund discusses why she thinks the uncertainty surrounding future interest rates has played a big part in the weaker performance of Apple's stock.
Persons: Beth Kindig Organizations: Apple
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