Nvidia reports record annual revenue of $215.9 billion, equal to £159.1 billion. The company overcomes investor concerns about massive artificial intelligence spending. In the final quarter, sales rise 73% year on year, far exceeding analyst forecasts.
CEO Jensen Huang highlights the explosive growth in computing demand. Computing demand is growing exponentially, he says. Customers rush to expand AI compute infrastructure. He calls these systems the factories of the AI industrial revolution. Huang ties them directly to long-term business growth.
Nvidia Reinforces Its Dominance in AI Infrastructure
Nvidia becomes the world’s most valuable publicly traded company, with a market value near $4.8 trillion. The company leads global AI development, supplying advanced chips to developers including OpenAI and Meta.
Gene Munster of Deepwater Asset Management expects continued growth. AI is advancing faster than most people realize, he writes on X. He emphasizes that users of AI tools understand the pace of change better than outside observers.
Investors continue to scrutinize Nvidia’s expanding deal network. Critics warn of potential circular financing, suggesting investments in partner companies may inflate perceived AI demand. Nvidia counters by pointing to strong orders and rising client interest.
Geopolitical Tensions Influence China Revenue
Nvidia faces US-China tensions that shape chip sales. Its latest guidance does not include specific revenue projections for China. Last month, the US approved conditional sales of Nvidia’s H200 chips to Chinese customers. The H200 is Nvidia’s second-most advanced processor.
A US Commerce Department official tells lawmakers that no H200 chips have reached China yet. The statement highlights strict export controls and political sensitivity.
Expansion Into Autonomous Vehicles and Robotics
Nvidia broadens its product portfolio to drive new growth. The company increases involvement in AI-powered physical products. At CES in Las Vegas, Huang unveils a platform for self-driving vehicles.
He introduces an open-source AI model called Alpamayo, designed to add reasoning capabilities to autonomous cars. Nvidia also plans to launch a robotaxi service next year with an undisclosed partner.
While Nvidia dominates AI model training, competition grows in inference computing. Inference applies trained AI models to real-world data for reasoning. In the fourth quarter, Nvidia acquires Groq for $20 billion, strengthening its inference expertise and consolidating market leadership.
