The nub of the message from Nvidia was that it is not about to stand still nor rest on the inroads it has made in the chip-enabled AI space. Rather, Huang’s address on Monday outlined a slew of new AI technology particularly around robotics, autonomous technology and personal computers that tech investment expert Dan Ives from Wedbush says will stretch the enormous technology lead that Nvidia has over the semiconductor industry and other big IT companies.
The viral-like spread of AI that Jensen sees in his vision for the company presages the creation of a billion humanoid robots, 1.5 billion self-driving automobiles and 10 million fully automated factories.
Huang described this sci-fi-sounding scenario as a multitrillion-dollar opportunity.
His speech also unveiled a laundry list of additional or beefed-up deals with corporate partners, including naming data storage firm Micron as Nvidia’s memory partner for its gaming graphics processing unit, and three autonomous driving deals.
Nvidia will supply the semiconductor chips for Toyota’s driver assistance programs, and will deliver the technology powering the self-driving trucks of Colorado-based Aurora. Meanwhile, Uber said it would use Nvidia’s Cosmos physical AI platform to power its autonomous driving ambitions.
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Huang’s address clearly hit a positive chord with analysts who turned up en masse to the Vegas event.
Goldman Sachs was reported saying that the string of announcements, at a minimum, highlighted Nvidia’s ability to innovate at industry-leading speed across hardware and software, as well as its robust partner and customer ecosystem.
Or as Ives from Wedbush put it: “We believe the robotics and autonomous technology market alone represents another $1 trillion of incremental market opportunity that Nvidia now can tap into over the coming years, which speaks to our view this company will exceed $US4 trillion market cap and ultimately could be a $US5 trillion market cap valuation as we head into the next 12 to 18 months.”
To reach $US4 trillion in a year would represent a share price gain of just over 15 per cent, and a 45 per cent gain would be needed to achieve a market capitalisation of $US5 billion.
These would not replicate the percentage price gains in previous years, but in absolute terms would be enormous.
It is not surprising that Ives likened Huang’s address at the Las Vegas CES to a rock concert rather than a chief executive address – he’s become the Taylor Swift of the business world. Move aside, Swifties, and usher in the Jensens.
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