Nvidia has announced a $5 billion investment in Intel, purchasing common stock at $23.28 per share — a price slightly below Intel’s recent market value. According to Reuters, the deal gives Nvidia roughly a 4 percent stake in Intel and sparked a 23 percent surge in Intel’s stock on the news.
The two companies will co-develop data-center CPUs and x86 system-on-chips (SOCs) that integrate Nvidia RTX GPU chiplets, while also linking Intel CPUs and NVIDIA GPUs through NVLink, Nvidia’s high-speed interconnect.
Intel CEO Lip-Bu Tan said: “Intel’s data center and client computing platforms, combined with our process technology, manufacturing and packaging capabilities, will complement Nvidia’s AI and accelerated computing leadership to enable new breakthroughs for the industry.”
National Security and U.S. Semiconductor Strategy
Gaurav Gupta, a vice president analyst at Gartner, highlights that this investment “will be seen as a move by Nvidia to strengthen national security.”
The U.S. government recently took a 10 percent non-voting stake in Intel under the CHIPS Act to secure domestic semiconductor production.
Gartner’s assessment aligns with reports that U.S. policymakers want to protect the only U.S.-headquartered, leading-edge chip manufacturer. Nvidia’s move reinforces Intel’s turnaround and ensures a critical homegrown supply of advanced chips.
Confidence in Intel’s Turnaround—and Need for Support
Gupta calls NVIDIA’s investment a “sign of confidence” in Intel’s recovery strategy, while noting it also signals that Intel needs financial backing.
Competitive Implications for AMD and ARM
Gupta warns that collaboration between NVIDIA CUDA and Intel’s x86 CPUs could pressure competitors such as AMD and ARM:
Server and AI Markets: With NVLink connecting Intel CPUs to NVIDIA GPUs, hyperscale data centers may prefer this tightly integrated platform, making it harder for AMD or ARM-based solutions to compete.
AMD remains a strong rival, and success depends on performance, pricing, and adoption.
Boosting NVIDIA in the PC Market
Intel will produce client SOCs with embedded NVIDIA RTX GPU chiplets, giving NVIDIA deeper penetration in the PC ecosystem.
Tighter CPU–GPU integration could improve power efficiency and performance, helping NVIDIA expand beyond discrete GPU add-in cards.
Strengthening NVLink Adoption in AI Infrastructure
The partnership embeds NVLink into Intel– Nvidia data-center products.
Broader NVLink deployment could lock in customers and create switching costs for rivals, cementing NVIDIA’s interconnect as a standard for AI workloads.
Supply-Chain Diversification for NVIDIA
Gupta points out that NVIDIA gains a U.S.-based manufacturing partner, adding resilience beyond its heavy reliance on TSMC.
Intel’s foundry and packaging capabilities offer NVIDIA an alternative supply chain, though specifics—foundry vs. packaging, revenue-sharing models—remain undisclosed.
Helping Intel Reclaim PC Market Strength
Partnering with NVIDIA could reinvigorate Intel’s corporate PC dominance, which has faced competition from AMD and Apple’s ARM-based Macs. Success hinges on OEM adoption, cost competitiveness, and the performance of joint CPU–GPU designs.
Bigger Picture: Advanced Manufacturing and CHIPS Act Goals
Analysts say the deal also supports Intel’s next-gen 14A process (targeted for 2027) by providing the volume needed to justify major fab investments.
Nvidia’s $5 billion Intel investment is a strategic partnership designed to bolster U.S. chip leadership, expand Nvidia’s presence in PCs and data centers, and give both companies a stronger foothold in the exploding AI market.