The $100 Billion Nvidia-OpenAI Virtuous Circle Has an Ugly Side

Tech builders love a good feedback loop, and Nvidia Corp. and OpenAI have created a $100 billion one this week.

Nvidia is investing the sum in OpenAI as part of a build-out of data centers, potentially nabbing 2% of the company through the first $10 billion tranche. The circle continues with OpenAI pledging earlier this month to spend $300 billion on cloud compute from Oracle Corp., which also buys chips from Nvidia. Meanwhile, Nvidia is pouring $5 billion into Intel Corp., while OpenAI is formalizing a new corporate structure with its most important investor, Microsoft Corp.

The high cost of developing AI systems has meant that the fortunes of the world’s biggest tech companies are becoming deeply entangled, bordering on incestuous. For some, that’s a clear signal that we are in bubble territory. But that misses the point. This also shows troubling industrial consolidation almost certain to keep new entrants to the market locked out as policy concerns fall further into the background. Nvidia is now the world’s biggest company at a market valuation of $4.5 trillion, while OpenAI is the world’s biggest private tech firm, and in the act of propping one another up, they are pushing potential long-term costs down the line, from concentrating resources to stifling competition and shunting policy efforts.

Nvidia’s shareholders sent its stocks up 4% on the news of its new partnership, knowing that such deals are helping cement their dominance of the AI boom. It’s easy to assume all this exuberance shows a lack of due care to the prospect of a bubble. But Azeem Azhar, an independent AI analyst, recently pointed to several reasons why the markets should be fine for the next few years at least.

While AI spending is gargantuan, for instance, it isn’t distorting wide swathes of the economy as with previous bubbles. Much of the funding is coming from well-capitalized hyperscalers – firms like Microsoft and Alphabet Inc. — rather than from risky debt. And AI companies’ revenue is real — and growing. OpenAI expects sales to triple to $12.7 billion this year (and ChatGPT could well hit a billion users before the end of the year) while its rival Anthropic has annual revenue of more than $5 billion.