For all the criticism directed at Nvidia’s original $100 billion OpenAI deal, one thing was never in dispute: the chip maker’s conviction about OpenAI’s strategic importance. What was in dispute was the structure — and in the new $30 billion equity investment, that structure has finally been fixed. For the first time, the Nvidia-OpenAI financial relationship makes simple, defensible sense.
OpenAI’s funding round is expected to raise approximately $100 billion at a $730 billion valuation. Amazon, SoftBank, and Microsoft are expected to join Nvidia as investors. The round reflects the extraordinary scale of capital that is flowing into AI’s leading companies, and the $730 billion figure places OpenAI in a category shared by only a handful of the most valuable companies on earth.
The story of how Nvidia and OpenAI arrived here involves one of the more instructive episodes in recent corporate history. The $100 billion deal announced last September was built on chip purchase commitments that gave Nvidia a circular interest in the investment: OpenAI would buy chips with Nvidia’s capital, and the money would cycle back. The deal was described as a “letter of intent” and was never formally binding — a fact confirmed this month when it dissolved. OpenAI then announced chip partnerships with AMD and Broadcom, removing any remaining logic for the original structure.
Nvidia’s response was to rebuild the investment relationship from scratch. A $30 billion equity stake — no chip conditions, no circular logic, no conflict of interest — replaces the problematic original arrangement. It is the structure that the relationship should have had from the start.
Whether the investment pays off depends on OpenAI’s ability to reverse declining market share, challenge Anthropic in enterprise software, reduce cash burn, and develop sustainable revenue streams. These are significant challenges. But the investment structure is finally sound — and that is the necessary foundation for any genuinely valuable long-term bet in the AI industry.