Close Menu
    What's Hot

    Ex-OpenAI Research Head: Vibe Coding Won’t Replace Software Engineers

    June 18, 2025

    Big Oil faces up to its sunset era

    June 18, 2025

    I’m 80 and Worked at the Same Company for 60 Years: Lessons I Learned

    June 18, 2025
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Hot Paths
    • Home
    • News
    • Politics
    • Money
    • Personal Finance
    • Business
    • Economy
    • Investing
    • Markets
      • Stocks
      • Futures & Commodities
      • Crypto
      • Forex
    • Technology
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Hot Paths
    Home»Business»Nvidia is a $3tn bet on the tokenisation of everything
    Business

    Nvidia is a $3tn bet on the tokenisation of everything

    Press RoomBy Press RoomMay 29, 2025No Comments3 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    Unlock the Editor’s Digest for free

    Roula Khalaf, Editor of the FT, selects her favourite stories in this weekly newsletter.

    To a hammer, everything looks like a nail. To a maker of chips that power artificial intelligence, everything looks like a “token”. That is the industry lingo for the units of information an AI model takes in and spits out. Nvidia’s founder Jensen Huang believes the world is on the cusp of a token explosion. His company’s $3.3tn market capitalisation depends on it.

    Nvidia reported $44bn of revenue in the three months that ended in April, 69 per cent higher than a year earlier, and more than analysts had expected, according to LSEG. The company remains the biggest beneficiary of the AI boom, with scant competition when it comes to state-of-the-art chips — reflected in a 71 per cent gross margin.

    That is not without hiccups. Nvidia took a $4.5bn writedown as a result of export curbs that have frozen it out of China, a market the company thinks could have represented $50bn of annual revenue. Nvidia had already been forced by the White House to sell only a lesser version of its AI chips to the People’s Republic. The writedown would have been bigger had Nvidia not managed to re-use unsold parts elsewhere.

    Fortunately, where a door closes, a window opens. Sales of the company’s new Blackwell AI chips are expanding, seemingly faster than expected. Morgan Stanley analysts, for example, had expected that the current quarter ending in July would bring in $43.5bn of revenue, after losing $5bn in forgone shipments to China. Instead, the company says it expects $45bn, even after stripping out a larger $8bn of lost sales.

    Moreover, a new wave of AI “factories” is springing up to fill a China-shaped hole. Big tech companies from Alphabet to Oracle were already planning mammoth data centres, and now governments are getting on the act. Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and Taiwan are all piling into state-backed “sovereign” AI. Huang is travelling to Europe next week, a trip that may produce more grand pronouncements.

    Then there is the token growth — meaning yet more chip demand — that comes from companies finding practical uses for increasingly complex models. Data centre construction already added 1 percentage point to US GDP in the first quarter, strategists at Apollo Global Management note. The launch of “reasoning” bots that think, check and double-check before answering can end up using 1,000 times as many chunks of data per query than in simpler, earlier AI models, Huang argues.

    Will they all use Nvidia chips to do so? For now, it’s pretty much the only game in town. Closest US rival AMD musters just one-sixth the revenue. Cerebras, an ambitious Abu Dhabi-backed upstart, is starting from a low base. And that fat gross margin gives Nvidia plenty of firepower to compete on price, should that become necessary. If the tokenisation of everything keeps up its current pace, Nvidia has much further to run.

    john.foley@ft.com

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Press Room

    Related Posts

    Big Oil faces up to its sunset era

    June 18, 2025

    Restaurants flash a warning

    June 18, 2025

    Energy Transition

    June 18, 2025
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    LATEST NEWS

    Ex-OpenAI Research Head: Vibe Coding Won’t Replace Software Engineers

    June 18, 2025

    Big Oil faces up to its sunset era

    June 18, 2025

    I’m 80 and Worked at the Same Company for 60 Years: Lessons I Learned

    June 18, 2025

    Restaurants flash a warning

    June 18, 2025
    POPULAR
    Business

    The Business of Formula One

    May 27, 2023
    Business

    Weddings and divorce: the scourge of investment returns

    May 27, 2023
    Business

    How F1 found a secret fuel to accelerate media rights growth

    May 27, 2023
    Advertisement
    Load WordPress Sites in as fast as 37ms!

    Archives

    • June 2025
    • May 2025
    • April 2025
    • March 2025
    • February 2025
    • January 2025
    • December 2024
    • November 2024
    • April 2024
    • March 2024
    • February 2024
    • January 2024
    • December 2023
    • November 2023
    • October 2023
    • September 2023
    • May 2023

    Categories

    • Business
    • Crypto
    • Economy
    • Forex
    • Futures & Commodities
    • Investing
    • Market Data
    • Money
    • News
    • Personal Finance
    • Politics
    • Stocks
    • Technology

    Your source for the serious news. This demo is crafted specifically to exhibit the use of the theme as a news site. Visit our main page for more demos.

    We're social. Connect with us:

    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest YouTube

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
    • Home
    • Buy Now
    © 2025 ThemeSphere. Designed by ThemeSphere.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.