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Nvidia (NVDA) invested $4 billion in Lumentum (LITE), a laser company, and Coherent (COHR), a maker of optical transceivers.
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Nvidia targets AI infrastructure bottlenecks as industry moves from copper wire to silicon photonics.
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The analyst who called NVIDIA in 2010 just named his top 10 AI stocks. Get them here for FREE.
Just when you thought NVIDIA (NASDAQ:NVDA) and its legendary founder and CEO Jensen Huang is getting its fill of interesting AI deals, the GPU titan makes another pair of moves. To be sure, all the investments in the AI ​​scene could be making some shareholders uneasy, especially as circularity introduces a more complicated web of risks over time.
Does each deal increase the weight on the shoulders of the AI ​​giants? Or is it simply a way to save both parties a lot of money while working together to solve some of the world’s toughest problems?
Could the deal act as an accelerator for broader adoption across industries as AI companies target new vertical markets? Or will they only raise the bar of expectations even higher, inevitably making AI dealmakers even more disappointed once it becomes clearer that the investment returns are not there, at least for a period of time that is acceptable to the average trader?
READ: The analyst who called NVIDIA in 2010 just named its top 10 AI stocks
Either way, I think the AI ​​boom is alive and well, but now that much of the short-term hype is fading, the big question is whether the long-term trajectory is still there and whether it makes sense for investors to hit the buy button now that the short term is somewhat less hyped while the long term is as exciting as ever.
While investors may have become accustomed to and perhaps bored with large language models (LLMs), I believe there are still many “ChatGPT moments” (like the ones Jensen Huang sees coming as physical AI takes shape) ahead.
Even as companies take some pains to avoid feeling like they’re imposing AI on users who aren’t ready or willing to adopt it for everyday workflows, I think the technology will evolve to a point where users will turn to AI, rather than having it delivered to them intrusively embedded in the side of a browser or something.
In any case, Nvidia is playing the “pick and shovel” game that wants to help companies position themselves in such a way that users choose to adopt (and hopefully pay for) the latest and greatest AI subscriptions. And, in that sense, I hope Nvidia continues to do business (big and small) while spreading its wings across industries and even geographies.