On December 26, 2025, Intel logged the closing of a transaction that, at the time, read like a bailout. Nvidia had wired $5 billion for 214.8 million freshly issued Intel shares priced at $23.28, a steep discount to Intel's market price, in exchange for a strategic partnership to co-develop data center CPUs with NVLink integration.
Four months later, Intel stock closed at $82.54 on the back of a first quarter earnings beat that demolished consensus by an almost absurd margin. Nvidia's position is worth roughly $17.7 billion. The return, in less than five months, stands at around 254 percent.
That kind of performance would be remarkable for any single investment. What makes Nvidia's track record genuinely extraordinary is that Intel is not the outlier. It is the pattern.
Since October 2025, Jensen Huang has deployed $16 billion across seven strategic positions in companies spanning chip design, AI cloud infrastructure, telecom networks, and silicon photonics, and every one of them has appreciated from the entry price.
The total mark to market value of the portfolio now exceeds $32 billion, implying an unrealized gain of more than $16 billion on capital deployed.
That is a blended return of roughly 103 percent across a portfolio built in the span of six months. No hedge fund manager would turn it down.

Table of contents
- What Jensen Huang Is Actually Building
- The Template: Equity Stake Plus Supply Chain Lock
- What Could Go Wrong
What Jensen Huang Is Actually Building
A superficial reading frames these investments as Nvidia buying influence in adjacent sectors. The deeper read is different.
Each position targets a specific layer of the AI compute stack, and together they form a vertically integrated map of the infrastructure that Nvidia's chips need to function at scale.
Start with Synopsys, the first of the major moves announced on December 1, 2025. Synopsys writes the electronic design automation software that chip teams use to design semiconductors.
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang told CNBC that the company was "built on a foundation of design tools from Synopsys."
By taking a 2.6 percent stake at $414.79 per share and committing to a multiyear partnership to shift Synopsys's compute intensive EDA workflows from CPUs to Nvidia GPUs, Nvidia is embedding itself in the very process by which chips, including competitor chips, are designed.
The stock trades above $500 today.
The Intel investment, announced the same month, operates at the fabrication layer. Intel will manufacture custom data center CPUs and PC processors with Nvidia NVLink integration, effectively making Intel a production partner for Nvidia's AI infrastructure vision. The $5 billion stake is less a rescue operation than a supply chain reservation at scale, locking in manufacturing capacity and technical collaboration for the next generation of compute.
Nokia sits at the network edge. Announced in October 2025, Nvidia's $1 billion investment at €6.01 per share was paired with a full stack commercial agreement: Nokia will adapt its 5G and 6G software to run on Nvidia's CUDA platform, and Nvidia introduced the Arc Aerial RAN Computer, a 6G ready telecommunications compute platform.
T-Mobile is already working with the two companies to integrate AI RAN technologies into its network. The AI RAN market is projected to exceed a cumulative $200 billion by 2030. Nokia's shares trade near €9 today, a 50 percent gain from Nvidia's entry.
CoreWeave and Nebius represent the cloud compute layer. CoreWeave, the GPU focused neocloud provider that went public in March 2025, received a $2 billion follow on investment from Nvidia in January 2026 at $87.20 per share, making Nvidia its second largest shareholder with roughly a 13 percent total stake.
Nebius, the Amsterdam listed AI infrastructure company with a $20 billion contract backlog, received its own $2 billion commitment in March 2026 at $94.94. Both companies run AI factories on Nvidia infrastructure, and Nvidia's investments ensure they have the capital and hardware access to scale. CoreWeave now trades above $110; Nebius has crossed $147.
The most recent moves and perhaps the most strategically revealing are the twin $2 billion investments in Lumentum and Coherent, both announced on March 2, 2026. These are photonics companies.
They build the lasers, transceivers, and optical interconnects that carry data inside and between AI data centers. As Nvidia's Blackwell systems push the limits of electrical interconnects, silicon photonics becomes the next bottleneck to solve.
The investments come with multibillion dollar purchase commitments from Nvidia and future capacity access rights, which means Nvidia is not merely a financial backer, it is a committed anchor customer. Lumentum is now constructing a new fabrication facility in North Carolina; Coherent is expanding its US manufacturing footprint.
Lumentum has risen from Nvidia's $695.31 entry to roughly $877 today, while Coherent has moved from $256.80 to around $336.
The Template: Equity Stake Plus Supply Chain Lock
What distinguishes this portfolio from a conventional venture capital strategy is the structure of each deal. These are not passive financial investments.
Every one of the seven positions is accompanied by a commercial agreement around multiyear purchase commitments, capacity access rights, joint product development, or co-marketing partnerships. Equity is the headline; the supply chain integration is the substance.
When Nvidia invests in Lumentum, it secures priority access to optical components that will be in short supply as AI data centers scale. When it backs CoreWeave, it ensures a major customer can afford to keep buying Nvidia hardware at scale, in effect, financing its own demand. When it takes a stake in Synopsys, it accelerates the migration of chip design workflows to GPU accelerated compute, which is both a product bet and a platform lock in for the broader semiconductor design community.
The net result is a portfolio that is constructed to appreciate in any scenario where AI infrastructure spending continues to grow. The positions are not independent bets, they are nodes in a single network, each reinforcing the others.
What Could Go Wrong
The portfolio's perfect scorecard deserves scrutiny. The single largest gainer being Intel at 254 percent is partly explained by idiosyncratic factors. Intel reported a first quarter earnings beat on April 24, 2026 that sent the stock up 24 percent in a single session, its best day since 1987.
That move reflects operational execution, not Nvidia's investment thesis. A portion of the Intel gain is a gift from earnings timing rather than a validation of the deal structure.
The photonics positions, Lumentum and Coherent, are newer, and their commercial value will only be visible once silicon photonics transitions from laboratory demonstration to mass production deployment in Nvidia's data center systems.
The companies have expanded manufacturing commitments and analyst price targets have moved sharply higher, but the technology is still in early innings of commercial scaling.
Regulatory risk remains a background consideration. The FTC reviewed the Intel stake before clearing it in December 2025, and any expansion of Nvidia's footprint into adjacent semiconductor sectors could invite renewed antitrust attention. The non-exclusive language in the Lumentum and Coherent deals is partly a response to that dynamic, a signal that Nvidia is not trying to monopolize supply chains, even as it reserves priority access to them.


