Nvidia Slides After Unveiling Leaves Investors Wanting More


(Bloomberg) — Nvidia Corp. shares slid on Tuesday after a wide-ranging product presentation by Chief Executive Officer Jensen Huang failed to propel the artificial intelligence chipmaker to new heights.

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The stock fell 6.2% to $140.14 in New York, marking the biggest single-day decline in four months. Though the Nvidia’s latest announcements gave an upbeat view of the company’s long-range prospects, there wasn’t as much near-term upside as some investors had sought. “Nvidia’s announcements today are significant, but long-tailed,” Stifel Financial Corp. said in a report.

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Huang took the stage at a packed arena in Las Vegas to kick off the CES trade show on Monday and present the new lineup, offering a vision for how AI will spread throughout the economy. The company wants its products to be the heart of a future tech world with a billion humanoid robots, 10 million automated factories, and 1.5 billion self-driving cars and trucks.

Interest in Nvidia’s products — and Huang’s forecasts — has exploded as companies rush to deploy new AI computing gear. The CEO outlined Nvidia’s products and strategy to his audience of hundreds for more than 90 minutes, including tie-ups with Toyota Motor Corp. and MediaTek Inc. that sent their shares more than 3% higher.

Before the retreat Tuesday, Nvidia’s stock had more than tripled in the past 12 months. Asian suppliers, including Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. and Hon Hai Precision Industry Co., also surged on optimism about Nvidia’s prospects.

Chief Financial Officer Colette Kress said during a separate event that the AI transition will continue to drive growth for the next 10 years. “It is going to be with us over the next decade and past that,” she said Tuesday during a JPMorgan Chase & Co. chat that coincided with CES. “We still have a lot of growth opportunity in the future for us.”

During Huang’s presentation Monday, he also delivered news to his traditional audience: gamers. Nvidia is launching an update to its GeForce GPUs — short for graphics processing units — which were created with the same Blackwell design that the company uses in its AI accelerators, Huang said.

New GeForce 50 series cards will take advantage of Blackwell’s capabilities to create even more realistic experiences for computer gamers, the company said. While traditional graphics chips build an image by calculating the shade of each pixel in the picture, the new technology will lean more heavily on AI to anticipate what the next frame should look like.


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