(Corrects spelling of word in headline to “announces”)
By Stephen Nellis, Alexandra Alper and Arsheeya Bajwa
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang said on Tuesday that the artificial intelligence chip leader will build seven new supercomputers for the U.S. Department of Energy, and said the company has $500 billion in bookings for its AI chips.
The first company to be worth more than $4 trillion, Nvidia is at the core of the global rollout of AI. It is striking deals around the world while also navigating a U.S.-China trade war that could determine which country’s technology is most used around the world.
Investors are looking for clarity on what chips the tech company will be able to sell to the vast Chinese market, but Huang kicked off a keynote address at the company’s GTC event in the U.S. capital by praising policy by U.S. President Donald Trump while announcing new products and deals. These included network technology that will let Nvidia AI chips work with quantum computers.
The supercomputers Nvidia is building for the Energy Department will in part help the United States maintain and develop its nuclear weapons arsenal. The supercomputers will also be used to research alternative energy sources such as nuclear fusion. The largest of the supercomputers for the Department of Energy will be built with Oracle and contain 100,000 of Nvidia’s Blackwell chips.
“Putting the weight of the nation behind pro-energy growth completely changed the game,” Huang said. “If this didn’t happen, we could have been in a bad situation, and I want to thank President Trump for that.”
Nvidia shares were up 3.3% at $197.82 on Tuesday afternoon.
Nvidia also announced new details with Finnish telecom equipment maker Nokia to target the AI communications market. Nvidia will invest $1 billion for a 2.9% stake in Nokia and it also introduced a new product line called Arc, designed to work with telecommunications equipment. Huang said Nvidia will work with Nokia to improve the power efficiency of the company’s base stations for 6G, the next generation of wireless data technology.
“We’re going to take this new technology and we’ll be able to upgrade millions of base stations around the world,” Huang said.
Altogether the company has $500 billion in bookings for its Blackwell and Rubin chips over the next five quarters, the CEO said.
Nvidia also announced a partnership with Palantir Technologies, a company that works closely with the U.S. government. However, the focus of Nvidia’s partnership was on Palantir’s commercial business, where Nvidia will help it speed up solving logistics problems for companies such as home improvement retailer Lowe’s. Such corporate work was a longtime stronghold of Intel.


