According to a senior executive on Wednesday, countries developing artificial intelligence models in their own languages are flocking to Nvidia’s processors, boosting the company’s already phenomenal demand as generative AI becomes more and more important to corporations and governments.
Investors’ high expectations were not met by Nvidia’s third-quarter prediction for increasing sales of its processors, which enable AI technology like OpenAI’s ChatGPT. However, the business reported a growing number of global clients, including governments, who are now looking for their own AI models and the technology to support them.
Nvidia’s revenue in the fiscal year that concludes in January 2025
According to Chief Financial Officer Colette Kress, nations that implement their own AI models and applications will add about low double-digit billions to Nvidia’s revenue in the fiscal year that concludes in January 2025. This was said in a conference call with investors following the company’s results announcement.
This is more than the previous estimate, which said that these sales would bring in high single-digit billions for overall revenue. Nvidia projected overall sales for the third quarter, which ends in October, to be roughly $32.5 billion.
According to Kress, “national imperatives” are the AI infrastructure and expertise that “countries around the world (desire) to have their own generative AI that would be able to incorporate their own language, incorporate their own culture, and incorporate their own data in that country.”
She cited the National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology in Japan as an example, which is constructing an AI supercomputer using hundreds of Nvidia H200 graphics processing units.
AI is also being used by governments as a tool to bolster national security. “AI models are trained on data, and for political entities—particularly nations—their data are secret, and their models need to be customised to their unique political, economic, cultural, and scientific needs,” Shane Rau, an analyst at IDC computing semiconductors, said.
“Therefore, they need to have their own AI models and a custom underlying arrangement of hardware and software.”
In an effort to thwart AI advancements that would benefit China’s military, Washington imposed restrictions on the country’s imports of advanced chips to China in 2023, which hurt Nvidia’s sales in the area. Companies have been attempting to take advantage of government initiatives to develop AI systems in local languages.
IBM announced in May that the Data and Artificial Intelligence Authority of Saudi Arabia would use Watsonx, the company’s AI platform, to train its “ALLaM” Arabic language model.
In addition to the substantial investments in Nvidia’s hardware made by major cloud providers like Microsoft, countries looking to develop their own AI models can spur growth potential for the company’s GPUs, according to Bob O’Donnell, principal analyst at TECHnalysis Research.
Source: Usnews