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Jensen Huang explains why Nvidia invests in tons of companies, instead of trying to pick winners

Jensen Huang says Nvidia invests in a lot of tech companies, instead of selecting a handful, for a reason.

“There are so many great, amazing foundation model companies, and we try to invest in all of them,” he said on an episode of the “Dwarkesh” podcast released on Wednesday. “We don’t pick winners. We need to support everyone.”

Huang, who cofounded Nvidia in 1993, said that there were two reasons behind this. One, he said its not Nvidia’s job to pick winners. Two, the company’s history is a lesson.

“When Nvidia first started, there were 60 3D graphics companies,” Huang said. “If you would have taken those 60 graphics companies and asked yourself which one was going to make it, Nvidia would be at the top of that list not to make it.”

He said that at the time, the company’s graphics architecture didn’t look promising.

“Everybody would have counted us out,” he said. “And here we are. So I have enough humility to recognize that. Don’t pick winners.”

Nvidia, which is the most valuable company in the world, has heavily invested in companies across the AI stack and related industries, including biotech, robotics, and self-driving. The chipmaker has big stakes in public companies, including CoreWeave, Intel, Synopsys, and Nokia.

Nvidia has also cast its bets wide in the large language model space.

In November, Nvidia committed to investing up to $10 billion in Anthropic to develop Claude. In February, the company announced it invested $30 billion in OpenAI.

In a March conference appearance, Huang said that the investments are likely to be Nvidia’s last in the two private companies.

“The reason for that is because they’re going to go public,” Huang said.

Nvidia is also invested in French frontier lab Mistral AI.

The tech giant has also cut smaller checks to startups such as autonomous driving company Wayve, data labeling firm Scale AI, and Figure AI, which is building humanoid robotics.




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You can’t cop Jensen Huang’s GPUs but you can eat the same cake he got for his birthday at work

Nvidia’s GPUs may be hard to snag, but Jensen Huang’s birthday cake might just be sitting in a display case at your local mall.

A strawberry soft cream cake from Korean bakery brand Paris Baguette was served at a birthday dinner for the Nvidia CEO near the company’s Santa Clara headquarters last Saturday, according to The Korea Times, which cited an interview with the bakery brand’s operator, Paris Croissant.

Huang, who turned 63 on Feb 17, invited about 30 engineers involved in South Korea’s SK Hynix DRAM and high-bandwidth memory for a dinner party at a fried chicken restaurant called 99 Chicken.

Korean business newspaper Hankyung reported that Huang had instructed Nvidia employees to “organize a dinner to encourage SK Hynix HBM engineers.”

“Please supply the highest-performance HBM4 without a hitch,” he told SK Hynix engineers that day, according to Hankyung.

SK Hynix is one of Nvidia’s key suppliers of high-bandwidth memory chips, or HBM chips — the advanced chips that sit alongside GPUs and feed them data at extreme speeds. Memory chips have become one of the biggest choke points in the AI boom.

At one point, Huang personally prepared and served somaek — a mix of soju and beer — to guests at each table.

For about two hours, Huang went table to table thanking his guests, according to Hankyung.

Huang’s cake is a huge marketing win for the bakery brand.

“It was all about the symbolic moment — our brand’s cake being present at a birthday party for the current leader of the global AI industry. It was a total boon without costing us anything,” a Paris Croissant official told The Korea Times.

Paris Croissant operates about 280 Paris Baguette locations across the US, including several in Silicon Valley. It aims to expand to 1,000 outlets in North America by 2030.

The bakery chain is a household name in South Korea, with about 3,400 stores there. Since making its first push overseas in 2004, the Paris Baguette brand has expanded to 15 countries.

The Paris Baguette cake is described as a “vanilla cake filled with soft cream and fresh strawberries, topped with more berries.”

A global AI superstar

Huang has become something of a spectacle wherever he goes.

In October, Huang sat down for fried chicken in Seoul with the heads of Samsung and Hyundai. The casual meal quickly turned into a media event.

A crowd of journalists, photographers, and fans gathered outside the restaurant, while national broadcasters aired live footage of the executives eating and talking inside.

Photos from the evening also captured reflections in the restaurant windows, showing fellow diners lifting their phones to snap pictures.

Following Huang’s visit to the Seoul restaurant, crowds lined up before opening hours, hoping to dine at the same table occupied by the Nvidia chief and his high-profile guests, Korean media outlets reported.

The restaurant has imposed a one-hour time limit on the table used by Huang and the Korean business leaders, the reports added.




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Chong Ming Lee, Junior News Reporter at Business Insider's Singapore bureau.

Jensen Huang says Nvidia would love to back an OpenAI IPO, and there’s ‘no drama’ with Sam Altman

Jensen Huang says Nvidia would love to invest in a future OpenAI IPO.

Huang said in an interview on CNBC’s “Mad Money” on Tuesday that there was “no drama” between Nvidia and OpenAI CEO Sam Altman, pushing back against recent chatter of tension in the relationship between the two companies.

“The first deal is on,” the Nvidia CEO said, referring to the company’s September deal with OpenAI, under which the company said it planned to invest up to $100 billion in the AI startup.

“​​And then there’s, of course, an IPO in the future,” he added. “We love to be participating in that as well,” he added.

Huang also described OpenAI as a “once in a generation company” and said Nvidia is “delighted to invest in it.”

His comments come amid reports suggesting internal unease around the deal.

The Wall Street Journal reported on Saturday that the investment had sparked internal concerns at Nvidia, with some executives questioning the deal, according to people familiar with the matter.

Separately, Reuters reported on Tuesday that OpenAI had been unhappy with certain newer Nvidia chips and had looked at alternatives since last year, citing people familiar with the matter.

Huang told reporters in Taipei on Saturday that speculation of any dissatisfaction with OpenAI was “nonsense.”

“We will invest a great deal of money, probably the largest investment we’ve ever made,” he added.

Altman has also pushed back on rumors of tension.

“We love working with NVIDIA and they make the best AI chips in the world,” wrote Altman in a post on X on Tuesday.

“We hope to be a gigantic customer for a very long time. I don’t get where all this insanity is coming from,” he added.

OpenAI is one of the world’s most valuable private AI companies and a major customer for Nvidia’s chips, which power the training and deployment of large language models.

The startup has not announced plans for an IPO, but its fundraising and computing needs have fueled speculation about how it will finance future growth.

“Big Short” investor Michael Burry said in a Substack exchange in January that he was surprised that ChatGPT “kicked off a multi-trillion-dollar infrastructure race.”

“It’s like someone built a prototype robot and every business in the world started investing for a robot future,” he wrote.




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Ayelet Sheffey

What Jensen Huang, and Larry Page’s reactions to the California wealth tax reveal

It’s a classic fight-or-flight response — with a billionaire’s twist.

A proposed wealth tax in California prompted the state’s resident billionaires to consider whether they wanted to continue their residency if the one-time 5% tax is approved.

Their reactions, said CFP professional Don Hilario, who works with financial planning clients in California, boil down to risk tolerance.

The tax, as proposed, would only apply to assets in the state during the 2026 tax year. Google’s billionaire cofounder, Larry Page, moved some of his assets out of California ahead of the January 1, 2026, deadline to avoid facing the tax, Business Insider first reported. Meanwhile, Nvidia’s billionaire CEO Jensen Huang said he has “not even thought about it once.”

“We chose to live in Silicon Valley, and whatever taxes they would like to apply, so be it,” Huang told Bloomberg TV’s Ed Ludlow. “I’m perfectly fine with it.”

Hilario, whose financial planning clients include individuals in Big Tech, said that the lingering uncertainty of the tax can trigger a need for certainty and autonomy.

“People who want to have a greater sense of control will do the Larry Page route,” he said, “versus people who have the temperament to endure will take Jensen’s route.”

Hilario described a hypothetical scenario in which individuals with high net worths are considering purchasing a home. In a period where the economy and interest rates are uncertain, do you want to put the lion’s share of your expenses toward the home in the event that rates will be higher in the future, or do you hold out and continue accumulating your wealth in the event that economic conditions improve?

“That’s the same type of emotions that exist with this tax bill because the fear of not taking any action is unsettling,” Hilario said.

The proposal, put forth by the union SEIU-United Healthcare Workers West to offset potential budget cuts to healthcare and education, is far from being implemented — it would require 870,000 signatures to make it onto the November 2026 ballot.

The SEIU said in its proposal that the concentration of billionaire wealth in California makes the state “uniquely positioned to address both the well-documented crisis of wealth inequality in the United States and the emerging and interrelated crises the state faces” with the budget cuts.

In addition to Huang and Page, other billionaires are voicing their opinions on the proposed wealth tax. LinkedIn’s cofounder, Reid Hoffman, wrote in a post on X that the proposal has “massive flaws.”

“Poorly designed taxes incentivize avoidance, capital flight, and distortions that ultimately raise less revenue,” he said.

Alex Spiro, an attorney who has previously represented billionaires, wrote in a letter to California Gov. Gavin Newsom that his clients would “permanently relocate” if the tax were to become law. Hilario said that the significant uncertainty surrounding the proposal, including how assets will be valued and whether the tax would change over time, likely forced billionaires to decide how risk-averse they really are.

“I still think ultimately it’s unclear. And I think when it’s unclear, it’ll make people, in this case, investors, be more cautious and defensive,” Hilario said. “And then a big part of it is, how do we respond emotionally? I think whether you’re taking early action or enduring, you do want to gather information and avoid making a decision that would ultimately be irreversible.”




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