Nvidia, the world’s most valuable chipmaker, has already committed an eye-popping $40 billion to equity AI deals in 2026, according to the company’s latest disclosures. The staggering figure underscores how the GPU giant has transformed from a hardware supplier into the single most influential financial force in the AI ecosystem.
What Happened
TechCrunch reported that Nvidia’s equity investments in AI companies have reached $40 billion this year alone, continuing a trend that began in earnest in 2024. The company has been writing increasingly large checks to AI startups across every layer of the stack — from foundation model providers to application-layer companies and infrastructure builders.
These investments serve dual purposes: they generate financial returns for Nvidia’s growing balance sheet, and they create deep technical dependencies on Nvidia’s CUDA platform and H-series GPUs. Startups that take Nvidia money often become locked into its hardware ecosystem for years to come.
Why It Matters
Nvidia’s investment strategy is reshaping competitive dynamics in the AI industry. Traditional venture capital firms increasingly find themselves competing with the chipmaker for the best deals, and Nvidia can offer something VCs cannot — guaranteed access to scarce GPU compute capacity. For cash-hungry AI startups burning through millions on training runs, this is a powerful advantage.
The $40 billion figure also raises questions about market concentration. Nvidia now holds a position reminiscent of Standard Oil in the early 1900s — supplying the essential infrastructure while simultaneously owning stakes in the companies that depend on it. Antitrust regulators in the US and EU are reportedly taking notice.
The Details
The $40 billion figure represents both direct equity investments and structured financing vehicles. Notable deals this year include participation in massive funding rounds for OpenAI, Anthropic, and a growing slate of AI infrastructure startups building the next generation of data centers. Nvidia has been particularly active in the “sovereign AI” space, partnering with national governments to build domestic AI computing capabilities.
The company’s market capitalization has surged past $4 trillion, making it one of the three most valuable publicly traded companies in history alongside Apple and Saudi Aramco.
What’s Next
If Nvidia maintains its current pace, the company could exceed $80 billion in annual AI equity commitments by year-end. The chipmaker shows no signs of slowing its investment appetite, particularly as new AI paradigms — reasoning models, agentic systems, and physical AI — require ever more computational horsepower. Expect Nvidia to double down on its “AI factory” vision, positioning itself as not just the hardware provider but the financial backbone of the entire AI industry.






