It looks like Nvidia is planning to stop further investments in OpenAI and Anthropic. CEO Jensen Huang said the latest investments in OpenAI and Anthropic might be the chipmaker’s last in those companies, as the AI companies prepare to go public this year.
The Financial Times reported in February that Nvidia and OpenAI had abandoned their $100 billion deal amid doubts about the health of the AI sector.
Reportedly, the opportunity to invest $100 billion in OpenAI is probably not in the cards as the ChatGPT creator is set to go public later this year, Huang said at the Morgan Stanley Technology, Media and Telecom conference on Wednesday.
Nvidia has made significant investments in leading artificial intelligence companies such as OpenAI and Anthropic in order to strengthen its role in the rapidly expanding AI industry.
As the demand for powerful AI chips and computing infrastructure continues to increase, Nvidia has positioned itself not only as a hardware supplier but also as a strategic investor in major AI developers.
In 2026, Nvidia participated in a major funding round for OpenAI, the organization behind ChatGPT. The round raised approximately $110 billion from several large technology companies and investors. Nvidia contributed about $30 billion as part of this investment, helping OpenAI expand its research capabilities and build large-scale data centers required for training advanced artificial intelligence models.
These facilities rely heavily on Nvidia’s high-performance graphics processing units (GPUs), which are widely used in AI development.
Nvidia has also invested in Anthropic, a company known for developing the Claude family of AI models. Nvidia committed up to $10 billion to support Anthropic’s AI research and computing infrastructure. The partnership also involves supplying Nvidia’s advanced AI chips to power the training and deployment of large language models.
These investments demonstrate Nvidia’s strategy of supporting multiple AI developers while reinforcing the demand for its technology within the global artificial intelligence ecosystem.
Reuters exclusively reported last year that OpenAI is laying the groundwork for an IPO that could value the company at up to $1 trillion.
Nvidia’s involvement with major artificial intelligence developers reflects a broader shift in how technology companies shape the future of the AI industry. Rather than focusing only on producing hardware, Nvidia has positioned itself as a central enabler of the entire AI ecosystem.
By supporting companies that build advanced AI models and applications, the company strengthens the demand for the high-performance computing infrastructure that modern artificial intelligence requires.
This approach highlights how hardware providers, software developers, and research organizations are becoming increasingly interconnected in the development of new technologies.
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At the same time, the potential transition of leading AI firms toward public markets suggests that the industry is entering a new stage of maturity. As companies grow larger and attract global investment, they may rely less on direct funding from technology partners and more on broader financial markets. This shift could gradually redefine the relationships between AI infrastructure providers and AI developers, moving from investment-based partnerships toward long-term commercial and technological collaborations.
More broadly, these developments illustrate how the global AI landscape is evolving from a period of rapid experimentation into one of large-scale deployment and commercialization.
Companies are now focusing not only on advancing AI capabilities but also on building sustainable business models, regulatory frameworks, and infrastructure capable of supporting widespread adoption.
Even Anthropic is looking to go public this year. Nvidia’s strategy demonstrates how critical computing infrastructure has become to the future of artificial intelligence.
As AI systems continue to grow in complexity and scale, companies that provide the foundational technologies behind them will remain key players in shaping the direction, accessibility, and impact of AI across industries worldwide.

