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NFL Texans co-founder McNair dead at 89
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IBM shares plunge 25% as AI spending boom disrupts business
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Spain deliver World Cup masterclass against France to reach final
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Majestic Spain stun France to reach World Cup final
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Brook upbeat about England ODI form amid Test captaincy uncertainty
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Nasdaq rebounds as cooling US inflation weighs on dollar
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Record-smashing heat wave surges from West to eastern US, Canada
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Hurdles record holder Tharp claims first win as professional in Budapest
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Wildfires that ravaged historic forest outside Paris contained
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McIlroy and Scheffler unconcerned by their place in golf history
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NY state pauses new large data center projects in US first
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Gill enjoys more Edgbaston success as India beat England in 1st ODI
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England v Argentina: World Cup battles
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IBM shares plunge as AI spending boom disrupts business
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Argentina v England in the World Cup: much more than just a game
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NY pauses new large data center projects for one year
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Green groups sue to block Trump rule gutting species habitat protections
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First day of new Lebanon-Israel talks in Rome has ended: US official
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Man Utd sign Aston Villa midfielder Tielemans
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Cuba faces third nationwide blackout in less than 10 days
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Pogacar inspired by Djokovic after Tour de France jeers
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Trump backtracks on plan to toll Hormuz ships
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Balogun admits red card furore affected US World Cup team
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France, Spain battle for place in World Cup final
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Pogacar inspired by Djokovic amid Tour de France jeers
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Pogacar inspsired by Djokovic amid Tour de France jeers
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'Gus' the T. rex fetches record $50.1 mn at US auction
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Croatia ex-international Simic held in graft case
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Dollar slides as rate hike prospects ease, oil gains moderate
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Record-smashing US heat wave surges from West to East
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England won't be drawn into Argentina World Cup rivalry: Kane
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Why does Brazil's PIX payment system bother Donald Trump?
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Swiss World Cup squad return home to heroes' welcome
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Pogacar wins Tour de France 10th stage on Bastille Day
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Too hot: Buttoned-up Tokyo officials ditch suits for 'cool' shorts
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US Supreme Court justices defiant as threats hit home
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Arsenal agree Trossard fee for Beskitas switch
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Brighton sign Croatia defender Veskovic for record fee
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France flaunts firepower, unity with allies in huge parade
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US inflation cools in June before renewed Mideast fighting
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Ticking time bomb? Europe's ageing population brings challenges
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India spark collapse before Root leads England to 258 in 1st ODI
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Oil gains on fresh attacks, dollar slides as inflation slows
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Dua Lipa backs Albanian protests against Trump-linked resort
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Fire ravages popular forest outside Paris
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Dangote's mega oil project threatens fragile Kenyan ecosystem: Greenpeace
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US consumer inflation cools in June on lower energy costs
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Rose says there's still time to realise British Open dream
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Israel says ready to move on pilot zones amid new Lebanon talks
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Ukraine PM resigns in Zelensky-ordered reshuffle
Chip giant Nvidia rides AI wave as profits soar
US chip giant Nvidia, whose products play a crucial role in artificial intelligence systems, crushed expectations on Wednesday, as the post-ChatGPT AI frenzy continues to lift the tech sector.
The Silicon Valley-based company said sales doubled year-on-year to $13.5 billion in the latest completed quarter, leaving a net profit of $6.2 billion -- an eye-watering 843 percent higher than a year before.
Signaling that the boom in AI is still going strong, Nvidia said revenue in the current quarter would ramp up further to $16 billion.
"A new computing era has begun," Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang said after the stellar earnings report.
"Together accelerated computing and generative AI are driving a broad based computer industry platform shift. Our demand is tremendous," he said on an analyst call.
Nvidia's stock rose more than 8 percent following the results. This year, the company's share price has more than tripled.
Nvidia's quintessential position in delivering artificial intelligence has made it a bellwether on the generative AI frenzy that took hold of the tech world after the release of ChatGPT late last year.
As the wave began to build, the company already wowed Wall Street with spectacular earnings earlier in the year, helping transform Nvidia into a trillion dollar company based on market capitalization, a rare perch shared only by a handful of giants.
"The entire tech sector and overall market was waiting for Nvidia with this being the purest and best barometer for AI demand," said Dan Ives of Wedbush Securities.
In the end, the earnings "were a 'drop the mic' moment that will have a ripple impact for the tech space for the rest of the year," he said.
Riding high on his success, Huang, who is known for always wearing a black leather jacket, urged companies to shift their spending away from classic computing and embrace AI.
"AI provides a new way of generating productivity, a new way of generating new services to offer to your customers and accelerated computing helps you save money and save power," Huang said.
Nvidia manufactures graphics processing units (GPUs), a powerful chip technology that is necessary to build the generative AI that delivers ChatGPT as well as image, facial and speech recognition.
The company also offers AI-focused computers and services making it an unparalleled one-stop shop for AI.
Originally designed for video game graphics, each of Nvidia's GPU chips cost tens of thousands of dollars and companies are scrambling to stock up as the pressure to keep up with the AI revolution grows.
- Supply crunch? -
Customers have struggled to get their hands on Nvidia's AI chips as startups, big companies, governments and cloud providers ramp up orders and hoard stock.
Elon Musk, who this year started his own AI company, has said that GPUs "are considerably harder to get than drugs" at the moment, with buyers even looking to buy components from struggling cryptocurrency companies that also use GPUs.
Some fear that Nvidia may eventually struggle to meet demand with crucial components from Taiwan's TSMC chip-making plants hard pressed to meet Nvidia's needs.
Nvidia doesn't actually make its own chips, but rather designs them and then outsources the manufacturing to other companies. It is therefore vulnerable to chokepoints in its complex supply chain.
Nvidia's strategic role in AI saw the United States government last year place export restrictions on the company's highest performing chips, which forced the it to make slower versions for the Chinese market.
The White House is considering additional export curbs that could further limit Nvidia's access to the Chinese market.
In an analyst call, Nvidia CFO Colette Kress warned against the US cracking down harder, saying it "will result in a permanent loss of an opportunity for the US industry to compete and lead in one of the world's largest markets."
D.Khalil--SF-PST