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Nvidia’s new playbook: From chips to AI partnerships

Charu Chanana 400x400
Charu Chanana

Chief Investment Strategist

Key points:

  • Nvidia is building the full AI stack — compute, connectivity, and applications — not just hardware.
  • Strategic alliances in telecom, robotaxi, healthcare, and enterprise AI point to a wider market footprint and a push toward long-term, recurring revenue.
  • Growth prospects stay strong as the company remains central to the AI infrastructure boom, but faces margin, policy, and competition risks.


Nvidia’s story keeps getting bigger. Once known mainly for its GPUs, the company is now spreading across the entire AI landscape — powering governments, telecom networks, healthcare, retail, and more. It’s becoming the backbone of the global AI economy.

Its latest partnerships stretch across industries — from government supercomputing to telecom networks, pharmaceuticals, retail, and quantum computing. Together, they paint a picture of Nvidia building the digital backbone of the AI economy.

What areas is Nvidia expanding into?

1. U.S. government (DOE × Nvidia x Oracle)

NVIDIA announced a landmark collaboration with Oracle Corporation and the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) to build the DOE’s largest AI supercomputer for scientific discovery.

The projects will advance research and national security, with estimated AI chip bookings around $500 billion. This cements Nvidia’s leadership in sovereign and public-sector AI infrastructure.

2. Telecom and 6G (Nokia × Nvidia)

In a surprise move, Nvidia is investing $1 billion for a 2.9% stake in Nokia, co-developing AI-native 6G networks and next-generation radio access (AI-RAN) systems. The two aim to combine Nvidia’s AI compute stack with Nokia’s telecom hardware. T-Mobile US and Dell Technologies will be the partners in trials for the AI-RAN stack.

This partnership could help U.S. carriers modernize networks, with Nvidia effectively embedding itself into the “nervous system” of future connectivity.

3. Enterprise AI (Palantir × Nvidia, CrowdStrike × Nvidia)

Nvidia is deepening its push into enterprise software:

  • With Palantir, it will merge data analytics with AI models to help companies deploy and scale AI in critical operations.
  • With CrowdStrike, Nvidia is powering real-time, AI-driven cybersecurity agents that continuously learn and adapt.

These deals expand Nvidia’s ecosystem beyond hardware — into the software and security layers of corporate AI adoption.

4. Robotaxis (Uber x Nvidia, Lucid x Nvidia)

Uber will partner with Nvidia to scale its robotaxi network and deploy 100,000 self-driving taxis and delivery vehicles in the coming year. Separately, Lucid will incorporate Nvidia's Hyperion architecture into future vehicles, including its upcoming $50,000 SUV, to enable driverless operation of privately owned cars.

Together, these initiatives bring Nvidia’s automotive AI capabilities together with real-world mobility data to accelerate the development of next-generation autonomous systems and intelligent transportation networks.

5. Healthcare (Eli Lilly × Nvidia)

Nvidia and Eli Lilly are collaborating to accelerate drug discovery using generative AI. The partnership will apply Nvidia’s BioNeMo platform to analyze molecular data and design potential drug candidates faster — a move that could shorten R&D timelines across pharma.

It reinforces how Nvidia’s compute power is being applied in life sciences — an area with both social impact and long-term commercial potential.

6. Physical AI (Manufacturing & Robotics)

A broad industrial cohort—including Siemens, FANUC, Foxconn Fii, TSMC, Toyota, Amazon Robotics, Figure, Agility Robotics—will adopt Nvidia’s Omniverse, Isaac, Jetson, and IGX Thor platforms.

These collaborations extend AI from virtual training environments to real-world robotics and smart-factory automation.

7. Retail (Lowe’s × Nvidia)

Nvidia is already working with Lowe’s to bring AI into physical retail operations. Using Nvidia’s Omniverse and computer-vision tools, Lowe’s aims to automate inventory management and improve in-store analytics.

It’s a glimpse into how AI will move from data centers into day-to-day business operations.

8. Quantum computing (NVQLink × Nvidia)

Nvidia also launched NVQLink, a system connecting quantum processors with GPUs and CPUs. Seventeen quantum companies and nine research labs are part of the collaboration — putting Nvidia at the center of the next frontier in high-performance computing.



Why it matters

  • Broader demand base: Nvidia is expanding beyond Big Tech cloud providers into governments, telecoms, healthcare, and retail — creating more stable and diversified revenue streams.
  • Ecosystem advantage: Its growing software and services platforms — including NeMo, Omniverse, and BioNeMo — keep customers tied to Nvidia’s ecosystem and open up recurring income opportunities.
  • AI adoption tailwind: As AI becomes a core part of business and government infrastructure globally, Nvidia remains at the epicenter of the AI hardware and infrastructure wave.
  • Multiple growth engines: The company now has several long-term drivers — spanning data centers, telecom and 6G networks, robotics, and edge computing — offering structural growth beyond short-term chip cycles.
  • Strategic positioning: Nvidia is embedding itself in critical infrastructure — from national labs to next-generation networks — making it indispensable to AI adoption worldwide.

Geopolitics remain a swing factor

With Donald Trump and Xi Jinping scheduled to meet in South Korea at the tail end of the APEC 2025 Summit, investors are watching carefully for any shifts in U.S. export policy on high-end AI chips. The question is whether the U.S. will ease, tighten or redefine the rules governing sales of chips such as Nvidia’s Blackwell series to China. Even the possibility of a “China-safe” variant of the chip could alter the size of Nvidia’s total addressable market (TAM) and its pricing power.

But the significance goes beyond just that bilateral meeting. On the sidelines of the summit, Nvidia’s leadership is expected to meet with major Korean conglomerates—including Samsung Electronics, Hyundai Motor Group and others

These meetings could signal broader regional alignment on semiconductor supply chains and AI infrastructure investment. If Korea’s chip, memory and auto players agree to U.S.-led frameworks, that may strengthen Nvidia’s role; conversely, any pivot toward China or supply-chain decoupling would raise pressure on margins and market access.

Risks to watch

  • Margin pressure: Rising costs and intense investment in new technologies could squeeze profitability. As competition grows and major clients negotiate harder, Nvidia’s pricing power may start to fade.
  • Regulatory uncertainty: The policy outlook — especially between the U.S. and China — remains fluid. Changes in export controls or sanctions could limit Nvidia’s ability to sell advanced AI chips in key markets.
  • Execution challenges: Many of Nvidia’s new initiatives, from telecom and robotics to quantum computing, are long-term bets. Delays or slower adoption could weigh on earnings momentum.
  • Cyclical AI spending: AI infrastructure investment tends to move in waves. After major build-out phases, spending pauses or “digestion” periods often follow, leading to near-term revenue swings.
  • Intensifying competition: Rivals like AMD, Qualcomm, and emerging AI-chip startups are quickly catching up. Nvidia may need to balance market share with margin protection as the field broadens.

Investment view

Nvidia’s transformation from a chipmaker to a full-stack AI platform puts it in a class of its own. Its partnerships now touch nearly every major growth area — data centers, telecom, healthcare, robotics, and enterprise software. The company remains the core enabler of the global AI build-out, and its upside potential is still meaningful.

But investors should also stay realistic: margin pressure, policy risks, and market cycles are real. Nvidia remains the undisputed leader of the AI infrastructure wave — but leadership comes with higher expectations and thinner room for error.


 

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