Tech giant Nvidia is hitting new ground courtesy of the high demand for its products, making the chipmaker reach a market value higher than the Canadian economy.
The California-based magnate hit a market capitalization above $3 trillion for the first time with Nvidia shares rising more than 5% to reach a record high of $1,224.40. Nvidia’s surge in stock pushed it past Apple to make it the second-most-valuable company in the USA stock market, only behind Microsoft. In contrast, the Canadian economy as measured by GDP stood at $2.12 trillion in 2023 according to data from the International Monetary Fund (IMF).
Sometime in 2023, Nvidia was worth about $1 trillion and its growth over the past months has been labeled the fastest among U.S. companies. The multinational corporation moved from $1 trillion to $2 trillion in value in less than half the period it took tech gurus like Microsoft and Apple.
Nvidia’s founder and CEO Jensen Huang attributes the mammoth growth to an insatiable demand for the organization’s chips and semiconductors across companies, industries, and nations. Beyond Nvidia’s chips and modules product portfolio, there’s another area that’s driving the organization’s stock through the roof.
From the Video Game Arena to Artificial Intelligence
Nvidia built its name by creating graphics chips for powering video games on personal, desktop computers and gadgets like Nintendo Switch. However, that isn’t to say the chipmaker doesn’t have a niche in other industries in the gaming sector.
A closer look at iGaming reveals that Nvidia’s Professional Graphics Cards were designed with the casino gaming hardware industry in mind. The NVIDIA Quadro P620 and NVIDIA Quadro P2000 chipsets offer remarkable gaming application solutions for game system developers.
Nvidia’s AI-integrated graphics make digital gaming devices stand out when playing real money casinos. 3D slot images are rendered accurately thanks to Nvidia’s exacting quality control while the chip’s strict build standards ensure seamless and HD streaming for live casinos.
In the end, players have a better game selection and improved account security among other benefits. The casino gaming interface may not compare to the ultimate immersive experience of video games but Nvidia’s GPU chipsets take iGaming a level higher.
It is no secret that Nvidia has been the poster child for the investor craze in AI which hastened with OpenAI’s unveiling of ChatGPT in 2022. Industry analysts even argue that Nvidia’s bread and butter, chips and semiconductors, was well suited for generative artificial intelligence and related technologies.
Researchers discovered that the graphics chips developed by Nvidia allowed AI algorithms to run efficiently on them and equally perform machine learning. It gave Nvidia quite a huge head start and everything snowballed from there.
AMD, Intel, and Other Competitors
Nvidia is the technology industry’s go-to provider for AI chips, modules, and associated software, with a market share of about 80%. Even tech bigshots, including Tesla, Amazon, Microsoft, Google, Meta, and others use its components to power everything from cloud-based AI services for their customers to their AI-based products and services.
In a recent announcement by CEO Jensen Huang, Nvidia will release an enhanced version of its Blackwell chip—Blackwell Ultra—in 2025. Later in 2026, the company will unveil a new AI chip platform titled Rubin and an Ultra version of Rubin to be subsequently released in 2027. However, Nvidia isn’t the only player on the court.
AMD and Intel are making immense strides with their own AI chips aiming to gain a substantial share of the market. AMD mentioned its MI325X and MI350 chips will appear in 2024 and 2025 respectively, while its next-gen MI400 AI accelerator will have a 2026 release. Intel highlighted that their Gaudi 2 and Gaudi 3 AI accelerators will be friendlier to the pocket of competing chips, a welcome when it comes to cost saving.
Nvidia also has to contend with emerging competition from its customers such as Microsoft, Amazon, and Google seeking to develop their own AI chips to save on capital expenditure. For now, Nvidia has a stranglehold on the AI scene, and at least for the foreseeable future.