When the dust settled on the collapse of a $100 billion circular deal, Nvidia and OpenAI had a choice: walk away or try again on better terms. They chose to try again — and the result is a $30 billion equity investment that is less dramatic in its headline number but far more credible in its structure. Bold, but honestly so.
OpenAI’s funding round is expected to raise approximately $100 billion at a $730 billion valuation. Amazon, SoftBank, Microsoft, and Nvidia are all expected to participate — a lineup that reflects the continued belief among the world’s largest technology companies that OpenAI represents one of the defining opportunities in the AI era.
The previous Nvidia-OpenAI deal had served as a cautionary tale about the AI industry’s tendency to prioritize attention over substance. The $100 billion commitment was tied to chip purchases, making it circular — Nvidia’s capital would essentially fund its own future sales through OpenAI. When it was confirmed this month that the deal was never formally binding and that OpenAI had been independently developing chip partnerships with AMD and Broadcom, the arrangement ended.
The new deal strips away everything that made the old one problematic. Pure equity, no chip conditions, no circular logic. Nvidia buys into OpenAI’s future; OpenAI receives capital without spending constraints. The governance concerns are gone, and what remains is a genuine financial bet.
The business case requires significant optimism about OpenAI’s future. ChatGPT’s market share has fallen. Anthropic is winning enterprise clients. Cash burn is high. Advertising is controversial. Key investors are publicly hedging. These are real challenges that demand real solutions. Nvidia, by investing $30 billion in OpenAI’s equity, is expressing confidence that those solutions will be found — and it is making that expression in the most financially meaningful way possible.
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