Jen-Hsun Huang Photographer: Patrick T. Fallon/Bloomberg
Jen-Hsun Huang

ChatGPT ‘Arms Race’ Adds $4.6B to Nvidia Founder’s Fortune

Jensen Huang’s chipmaker is Wall Street’s top pick for traders looking to profit from the AI chatbot, giving him the greatest wealth gain this year among US billionaires.

(Bloomberg) -- One of the biggest winners from the soaring popularity of the ChatGPT tool is a billionaire Taiwanese immigrant known for his black leather jackets and tattoo resembling the logo of Nvidia Corp., the company he co-founded in 1993.

Jensen Huang has seen his fortune climb by 33% this year to $18.4 billion, a larger percentage gain than any other US billionaire, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index. It’s a sharp contrast to last year, when his wealth decline was one of the biggest among US technology titans, along with Meta Platforms Inc.’s Mark Zuckerberg.

His firm, initially focused on creating computer chips to create graphics for video games, has become the dominant player in powering artificial intelligence applications, from autonomous cars to robots to crypto mining. That specialty has made it one of Wall Street's top wagers for how to profit from exuberance about the future of AI, encouraged by Microsoft Corp. vowing to put $10 billion into OpenAI, the startup that developed ChatGPT.

“ChatGPT kind of started an arms race,” said Christopher Rolland, senior analyst at Susquehanna Investment Group. “Nvidia is far and away the leader.”

Rapid growth from ChatGPT usage could result in sales of $3 billion to $11 billion for Nvidia over 12 months, Citigroup Inc. estimated last week. While acknowledging the difficulty in modeling growth for such a nascent service, analyst Atif Malik based his values on projections for the number of words generated by ChatGPT and revenue per word for Nvidia.

Read more: Nvidia Is Wall Street’s Top Pick for ChatGPT Mania

Huang, 59, who studied electrical engineering at Oregon State and Stanford universities, declined to comment through a spokesperson.

At an event this week in Stockholm, Huang said AI will present challenges to society and regulators, and that while the new technology offers much promise, it also has “some potential harm.”

“What is the social norm for using it?” Huang said at the meeting of Nordic executives and researchers. “What are the legal norms? Everything is evolving now.”

After peaking at more than $800 billion in late 2021, Nvidia’s market value retreated last year as its shares tumbled 50% amid a sharp decline in sales of its gaming chips and a general slowdown in personal computer sales. The company’s stock has jumped more than 35% since the start of 2023, mirroring investor enthusiasm over the chatbot’s potential.

“There’s obviously a lot of noise around ChatGPT,” said Ruben Roy, managing director at Stifel Nicolaus. “A semiconductor company like Nvidia is the best way to play AI.”

--With assistance from Jack Witzig.

To contact the author of this story:
Blake Schmidt in New York at [email protected]

Hide comments

Comments

  • Allowed HTML tags: <em> <strong> <blockquote> <br> <p>

Plain text

  • No HTML tags allowed.
  • Web page addresses and e-mail addresses turn into links automatically.
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.
Publish