Huang's net worth fell from $121 billion to around $100 billion, per the Bloomberg Billionaires Index.
Jensen Huang and Nvidia both saw their values hit hard Monday as investors digested the impact of Chinese AI company DeepSeek.
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang saw his personal fortune tumble on Monday amid turbulence in U.S. tech stocks. His net worth hit $103.7 billion by the end of the trading day, marking a $20.8 billion ...
Jensen Huang still owns a hugely valuable stake in Nvidia Corp., but the chief executive's position is worth $20.7 billion less after Monday's sharp selloff. Huang's stake is now worth $101.9 ...
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang's net worth fell from $121 billion to around $100 billion on Monday, per the Bloomberg Billionaires Index.Artur Widak/NurPhoto via Getty Images Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang's net worth fell by about $20 billion on Monday. Huang lost ...
Chinese AI firm DeepSeek has given Silicon Valley a wake-up call by launching LLMs that are cheaper yet as effective as OpenAI's models.
NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang says he can't trust Samsung's HBM memory, 'we cannot trust and do business with them because senior executives change frequently'.
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang has a vision for the future — and some advice for the generations that will navigate it.
DeepSeek is challenging assumptions about the computing power and spending needed for AI advances. OpenAI, Oracle and SoftBank last week made headlines when they announced a joint venture, Stargate, to invest up to $US500bn in building out AI infrastructure. Microsoft plans to spend $US80 billion on AI data centres this year.
DeepSeek, a Chinese AI startup that’s just over a year old, has stirred awe and consternation in Silicon Valley after demonstrating breakthrough artificial intelligence models that offer comparable performance to the world’s best chatbots at seemingly a fraction of the cost.
In 2023, smartphones-to-silicon conglomerate Huawei quietly released its flagship Mate 60 Pro handset. The launch, while muted, was worth celebrating in the People’s Republic: the device featured a made-in-China chip that had previously seemed out of reach amid crippling US sanctions.