NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang charms China
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Days after a White House meeting with President Donald Trump, Jensen Huang was being hailed by an audience on a stage in Beijing.
On his third trip to China in a year, Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang – head of the world’s most valuable company – was on a full-blown charm offensive. As a guest of honour at the China International Supply Chain Expo,
Nvidia's AI chip sales in China boost near-term outlook, but geopolitical risks cast doubts on long-term growth. Click to read more on NVDA's Hold rating.
Today’s Forbes Daily covers potential Federal Reserve chair replacements, the wealthiest get richer off bitcoin, a new biotech billionaire, AI in medicine and more.
Now, let's consider Jensen Huang's recent move. The CEO sold shares of Nvidia from July 8 through July 10, and that follows a sale of shares from June 18 through June 23.
As AI moves from perception to reasoning and into the physical world, Nvidia’s Jensen Huang says the next-gen innovators must grasp physics, not just programming. Advising 2025 graduates, he champions the “physical sciences” to prepare for a robotics-driven future.
China’s Commerce Minister Wang Wentao told Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang on Thursday that he hoped multinational companies, including Nvidia, would
Nebius is currently the best stock that Nvidia owns. The company flew under the radar earlier this year because it was listed on the Nasdaq Stock Exchange just recently (in October) after a nearly three-year hiatus. The Russian tech giant Yandex, which was delisted due to sanctions after Russia invaded Ukraine, formerly owned Nebius' assets.