Why Wall Street wasn’t won over by Nvidia’s big conference
Wall Street investors, it seems, were unmoved by the leather jacket-clad founder’s bullish 2.
Instead, they placed more weight on AI’s uncertain future and fears of a bubble. The nervousness felt by Wall Street couldn’t be more different than the buzzy atmosphere in Silicon Valley, where confidence, not uncertainty abounds. Huang talked for more than two hours about the company’s latest innovations, from new video game graphics tech and updated networking infrastructure to autonomous vehicle deals and a new chip designed with Groq to accelerate AI inference in the Vera Rubin system. He also threw out some eye-watering numbers about Nvidia’s business and beyond.
Shouldn’t that make investors excited? It’s not surprising that they aren’t, Futurum CEO Daniel Neuman told TechCrunch. A great new uncertainty “[AI] is so good, so transformational, and moving so fast that we don’t actually understand what it’s going to mean for all the things that are the societal constructs that we’ve come to understand,” Neuman said. “The markets hate uncertainty. The speed of innovation has actually created a great new uncertainty that I think most people never expected. ” Some of that uncertainty comes from misleading information coming out of the market, Neuman said, who added that headlines about low enterprise adoption of AI aren’t painting the full picture — at least, based on conversations he’s having.
“Enterprise AI adoption is going to hit inflection and scale very quickly,” Neuman said.
“I actually think it’s happening.
When you say it’s not, I think what you’re probably saying is the [return on investment] and the receipts are still a little bit undefined and companies are citing the surveys and the reports that are largely six-month-old data.
It just takes months to aggregate data.
” This sentiment holds weight when you look at Nvidia’s numbers from past quarters.
While companies may not be touting their AI ROI, they are increasingly purchasing Nvidia’s tech.
The company continues to not only beat its lofty goals and quarterly estimates, but soar past them.
Nvidia’s revenue was up 73% year-over-year last quarter.
There is no sign that will change any time soon either.
“The economy is sort of orbiting around Nvidia,” Cook said.
“It’s building this necessary infrastructure.
All these different companies in hardware and software and physical AI — even Caterpillar is now physical AI — that are building off of these platforms. ” None of this means there isn’t currently an AI bubble or couldn’t be one in the future.
“Nvidia, as you know, is a platform company,” Huang said in his GTC keynote.
We have a rich ecosystem, and today there are probably 100% of the $100 trillion dollars of industry here
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