Nvidia Splashes $20 Billion on Trump Jr-Backed AI Chipmaker

Published 17 hours ago2 minute read
David Isong
David Isong
Nvidia Splashes $20 Billion on Trump Jr-Backed AI Chipmaker

Nvidia, the prominent AI chipmaker led by CEO Jensen Huang, has finalized its largest acquisition to date, securing a $20 billion all-cash deal to purchase assets from artificial intelligence startup Groq. This monumental transaction surpasses Nvidia's previous record acquisition, the $7 billion purchase of Israeli chip designer Mellanox in 2019, according to a CNBC report.

Under the terms of the agreement, Nvidia will acquire all of Groq's assets, with the explicit exception of its nascent GroqCloud business. Groq has confirmed in a blog post that its cloud operations will continue to function “without disruption.” While the financial specifics of the deal were not disclosed by Groq, CNBC reports the total value to be $20 billion.

A core component of the acquisition is Groq's inference technology, for which both companies have also entered into a non-exclusive licensing agreement. Furthermore, Groq's founder and CEO, Jonathan Ross, along with the company's president, Sunny Madra, and other senior leaders, will transition to Nvidia. Their role will be to “help advance and scale the licensed technology” within Nvidia's ecosystem.

The deal materialized rapidly, just three months after Groq successfully raised $750 million in a financing round that valued the AI startup at approximately $6.9 billion. This round saw significant investment from entities including Blackrock, Neuberger Berman, Cisco, Samsung, Altimeter, and 1789 Capital, where Donald Trump Jr. is a partner. Despite the acquisition of its core assets, Groq is set to continue operating as an independent company, with finance officer Simon Edwards assuming the role of CEO.

Nvidia's strategic motivation for this acquisition, as revealed in an internal email from Jensen Huang to employees cited by CNBC, is to significantly expand its AI chipmaking capabilities. Huang stated, “We plan to integrate Groq’s low-latency processors into the NVIDIA AI factory architecture, extending the platform to serve an even broader range of AI inference and real-time workloads.” He further clarified that while Nvidia is integrating Groq's intellectual property and senior talent, it is not “acquiring Groq as a company.”

This substantial investment by Nvidia, which held $60.6 billion in cash and short-term investments as of October (a substantial increase from roughly $13 billion in 2023), reflects a broader industry trend. In recent years, other technology giants such as Google, Meta, and Amazon have also pursued similar licensing deals to integrate top talent and advanced technology from smaller AI firms into their operations.

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