Nvidia is making a massive financial move that could reshape the artificial intelligence landscape. The chip giant is reportedly set to invest $30 billion in OpenAI’s next fundraising round, abandoning the terms of a previous $100 billion arrangement that fell apart just weeks ago. The new deal is structured very differently — and signals a fundamental change in how these two tech titans plan to work together.
Previously, the two companies had announced a deal where Nvidia would fund OpenAI specifically to buy its own chips, raising eyebrows about the circular nature of the transaction. Critics and market observers questioned whether such a deal truly represented genuine investment or simply an attempt to inflate figures and boost stock prices. Nvidia’s stock had surged past $5 trillion in market value following that announcement, underscoring the enormous financial stakes involved.
The new arrangement eliminates the chip-buying commitment entirely. Instead, Nvidia will receive OpenAI stock in exchange for its $30 billion, making it a straightforward equity investment. This restructuring removes the problematic circularity of the original deal and gives Nvidia a direct financial interest in OpenAI’s commercial success, regardless of which chips the AI company ultimately chooses to use.
OpenAI is simultaneously working to reduce its dependence on Nvidia’s hardware by forging new partnerships with chip rivals including AMD and Broadcom. While these moves suggest OpenAI is hedging its bets technologically, the equity investment from Nvidia complicates that picture. Broadcom’s leadership has already tempered expectations, noting that they do not anticipate significant OpenAI-related revenues in the near term.
The broader funding round, expected to total around $100 billion, would value OpenAI at $730 billion. SoftBank, Microsoft, and Amazon are among the other expected contributors, though SoftBank’s leadership recently indicated that nothing has been finalized. As OpenAI tests advertising features and searches for a clear path to profitability, Nvidia’s $30 billion vote of confidence may be its most powerful asset yet.