Jensen Huang founded accelerated computing company Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA) in 1993, and has served as the CEO and president ever since. Nvidia has achieved many breakthroughs under his leadership, but the invention of the graphics processing unit (GPU) in 1999 was particularly momentous.
The quantum computing rally came to an abrupt end on Wednesday following comments from Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang. During a question-and-answer session with analysts, Huang put forth a more pessimistic view of the quantum computing timeline:
The stock had risen to a new all-time high of $149.43 a share on Monday but Huang failed to deliver short-term promises to investors on the firm’s artificial intelligence and robotics
Nvidia CEO's comments on quantum computing caused a market drop, erasing $8 billion from companies like IonQ, Rigetti, and D-Wave. Huang suggested useful quantum computing may be 15-30 years away. D-Wave's CEO disagreed,
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang used his CES 2025 keynote to unveil the company’s next generation of GPUs and declare the rise of "Agentic AI"—a shift he says will create a multi-trillion-dollar industry and redefine how people work.
Continued Ives, “We could go back to quarters where the stock sells off, bears come out of hibernation mode, stock goes to $100, then all of a sudden, two months later, back up to all-time highs. These knee-jerk reactions, it’s easy to get scared by them because they don’t say anything about near-term demand.”
Quantum stocks like Rigetti, IonQ and D-Wave Quantum saw steep losses after Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang said quantum computers are decades away.
"We still see CES as a positive catalyst, re-asserting NVDA's platform dominance/opportunity in high-growth markets," Bank of America said.
The ChatGPT moment for robotics is coming,’ Huang said. Here’s why. Following his blockbuster keynote address at the 2025 Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, Nvidia founder and CEO Jensen Huang shared more about his vision of a future where AI,
It’s a big event every year, but this year we've seen some really eye-opening news on advancements in AI, and hardware in particular.
The Nvidia boss unveiled a new AI platform at CES called Cosmos, which aims to give robots and autonomous cars endless real-world scenarios to study.