Nvidia Just Got Another Tailwind — Why Groq’s $6.9 Billion Valuation Proves AI Chips Are Still Hot

  • Groq’s language processing units (LPUs) may one day eat into Nvidia’s dominant market share.

  • The company’s new valuation shows the huge demand in AI chips, and Nvidia is best positioned to capitalize on that.

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The stock market is buzzing over chip start-up Groq’s latest fundraising round. The privately held company announced that it raised $750 million, which more than doubled its valuation to $6.9 billion.

Groq’s chips have some specific differences from those made by the biggest chipmaker, Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA). Its chips are made solely for inference, as opposed to Nvidia chips that are designed for training and inference. Groq’s language processing units (LPUs) are stripped down compared to Nvidia’s graphics processing units (GPUs), and can run AI models to translate text, answer questions, or run bots fast and with lower energy use. That’s appealing, considering Nvidia’s GPUs cost tens of thousands of dollars apiece.

But while Groq is essentially a potential competitor to Nvidia, the smaller company’s new valuation is a tailwind for the mammoth company, which sports a valuation of more than $4 trillion.

Why is Groq’s good news also good for Nvidia? Let’s take a look.

Image source: Nvidia.

Groq was founded in 2016 by a group of former Google engineers, including Jonathan Ross, who designed the tensor processing unit AI accelerator and became Groq’s CEO. While the company started slowly — and by Ross’s admission, nearly folded — it found new strength after OpenAI unveiled its ChatGPT platform in late 2022.

The company currently offers a cloud product, GroqCloud, that allows users to work with its LPUs in a cloud environment, and GroqRack Cluster, which is an on-site product for customers who are running their own data centers. Groq says more than 1 million developers are currently using the GroqCloud platform.

The company has completed multiple fundraising rounds, including the latest led by Dallas-based investment firm Disruptive, which has invested nearly $350 million in the company. Disruptive also invested in the launches of Palantir Technologies, Spotify Technology, Hims & Hers Health, and Airbnb.

“As AI expands, the infrastructure behind it will be as essential as the models themselves,” Disruptive CEO Alex Davis said. “Groq is building that foundation.”

Nvidia currently is the top chip supplier for data centers that are powering the most sophisticated and challenging AI-powered platforms. Nvidia has an estimated 92% GPU market share for data centers.

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