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Why Nvidia stock isn’t joining the Micron-led surge today

Jensen Huang at Computex

Nvidia (NVDA) stock fell on Thursday, giving up premarket gains as investors weighed growing competition in the artificial intelligence chip market despite another wave of enthusiasm across the broader AI sector.

The stock was down 1.3% at $196.76 in early trading after closing 0.5% lower in the previous session.

The decline came even as memory-chip stocks advanced following stronger-than-expected results from Micron Technology, which helped lift sentiment across parts of the semiconductor industry.

Several of Nvidia’s major peers also traded lower. Shares of Advanced Micro Devices and Intel were in the red alongside the AI chip leader.

Competition moves back into focus

While Nvidia continues to dominate the market for artificial intelligence accelerators, investors are increasingly paying attention to efforts by major technology companies to reduce their dependence on the company’s hardware.

The latest development came on Wednesday when OpenAI and Broadcom unveiled a custom artificial intelligence chip called Jalapeño.

The processor marks OpenAI’s first entry into AI silicon development and will be used primarily for inference workloads, the computational process of delivering AI responses to users through ChatGPT and other applications.

According to OpenAI President Greg Brockman, the chip was developed rapidly with assistance from the company’s own AI systems.

“The degree to which our models have been able to accelerate it was very surprising to us,” Brockman said during an interview with CNBC.

Brockman said the chip was designed from end to end in approximately nine months.

The project highlights a broader trend across the artificial intelligence industry as leading technology companies and AI developers seek greater control over their computing infrastructure.

Broadcom expands AI presence

The OpenAI partnership further strengthens Broadcom’s position in the growing market for custom AI chips.

Broadcom has emerged as one of the major beneficiaries of the generative AI boom by helping hyperscalers and frontier AI laboratories develop application-specific processors tailored to their own workloads.

Shares of Broadcom have risen about 10% this year and have increased nearly sevenfold since the end of 2022 as demand for AI infrastructure has surged.

The company has become a key partner for organizations looking to supplement or partially replace standard AI hardware deployments with custom-designed silicon.

Meanwhile, Qualcomm recently announced supply agreements involving Microsoft and Meta Platforms, adding to investor concerns that large technology companies are diversifying their AI hardware strategies.

Nvidia remains the industry leader

Despite the growing number of competitors, there is little evidence that Nvidia has lost meaningful business.

The company’s graphics processing units remain the preferred option for many artificial intelligence training workloads, and major technology companies continue to commit substantial spending toward Nvidia-based infrastructure.

Many hyperscalers and AI developers have already announced plans to deploy Nvidia’s next-generation Vera Rubin platform, which is expected to play a central role in future AI data center buildouts.

Nevertheless, investors appear increasingly focused on the long-term implications of custom chip development.

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