CEO da Nvidia, Jensen Huang, defende aposta de US$ 5 bilhões na rival Intel e a classifica como jogada inteligente
Jensen Huang desvia críticas e justifica movimento ousado—investir pesado no concorrente direto.
Estratégia ou loucura?
Enquanto analistas tradicionais coçam a cabeça, Huang corta direto ao ponto: "Intel possui fundamentos sólidos que o mercado subestima". Os US$ 5 bilhões não são caridade—são uma posição calculada para lucrar com a recuperação da fabricante de chips.
Detalhes revelam que o investimento acontece via aquisição de títulos conversíveis e participação acionária direta. A Intel, que patina na concorrência com AMD e a própria Nvidia, recebe oxigênio inesperado.
Críticos do setor financeiro já rotulam a jogada como "aposta especulativa disfarçada de visão estratégica". Huang rebate: "Sabemos identificar valor onde outros veem apenas problemas".
O mercado reage com cautela—ações da Intel disparam 8% no pré-mercado, enquanto as da Nvidia oscilam levemente. Especuladores lembram que, no mundo dos chips, rivais hoje podem ser parceiros amanhã—ou aquisições.
Para a Intel, os US$ 5 bilhões chegam como salva-vidas em mar revolto. Para Huang, é mais uma jogada ousada que pode render bilhões—ou virar caso de estudo em apostas erradas. Como diria qualquer fundo de hedge: "arriscar US$ 5 bi em um concorrente? Só se o retorno potencial justificar—ou se tiver insider trading não detectado".
Nvidia plugs into Intel’s hardware as Intel sells off assets
Greg Ernst, Intel’s revenue chief, said on LinkedIn that the agreement came together over the past few months and was finalized on Saturday. Under the deal, Nvidia becomes a major customer of Intel CPUs while also supplying GPU chiplets that go into Intel’s client-side products.
“We’re going to become a very large customer of Intel CPUs, and we’re going to be a large supplier of GPU chiplets into Intel chips,” Jensen told reporters. He clarified that the partnership won’t affect Nvidia’s existing work with Arm, and that Thursday’s announcement is only about products, not Intel’s foundry.
Right now, Nvidia uses Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC) to manufacture its chips. But Jensen said they still evaluate Intel’s foundry capabilities and may work with them down the line.
For this partnership though, the collaboration will only involve Intel’s chip packaging, the late-stage part of chip production that combines components into a single part ready for installation.
Tan, who was named Intel’s CEO in March after Pat Gelsinger was ousted, said during the same press call, “I’d like to thank Jensen for the confidence in me, and our team and Intel will work really hard to make sure it’s a good return for you.”
Pat was removed by Intel’s board last year due to rising costs in manufacturing and failure to break into the AI chip market. Since then, Tan has led Intel through major cost-cutting and fundraising moves.
Intel has raised $2 billion from SoftBank, sold a majority stake in its ASIC subsidiary Altera to Silver Lake for $3.3 billion, and offloaded $1 billion in stock from Mobileye, its self-driving tech unit. The company also said in July that it’s laying off 15% of its workforce by year’s end.
In total, Intel has received $8.9 billion in CHIPS Act grants and loans from the U.S. government—but the Trump administration requested a 10% equity stake in exchange for the funds. That stake was secured in August.
Despite the cash, Intel still hasn’t landed any major foundry customers like Nvidia or Apple. Analysts have said the company needs at least one to prove that its technology is reliable at scale.
If it doesn’t, it may be forced to abandon the foundry business altogether. That has raised concern in Washington, where lawmakers see Intel as strategically important due to its status as the only American firm that can build top-tier chips onshore.
Jensen was in England earlier this week with President Donald Trump, attending a state dinner at Windsor Palace and announcing new projects in the U.K.
But both Jensen and a White House official confirmed that the U.S. government was not involved in the Nvidia-Intel deal. Kush Desai, a White House spokesman, later said in a statement, “Intel’s new partnership with Nvidia is a major milestone for American high-tech manufacturing.”
Intel’s fall over the last five years has been steep. Its shares have dropped 31.78%, while Nvidia’s have jumped 1,348%, putting Nvidia’s market cap at $4.25 trillion compared to Intel’s $143 billion as of Thursday’s close.
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