DeepSeek who? Nvidia said demand for its AI chips remained strong in its first quarterly earnings report since DeepSeek’s cheaply trained models raised questions about the need for Nvidia’s state-of-the-art chips. The Nvidia results—often read as tea leaves for broader AI momentum—came after a post-DeepSeek earnings season left the rest of Big Tech largely unscathed. So what happened to those fears that the upstart Chinese lab’s innovation could mark a new era of shoestring budgets? Analysts say they may have been overblown—and the real story is a bit more complicated. To recap: DeepSeek’s ability to train AI that performs on par with leading models despite export controls curbing access to the latest chips triggered a sell-off of Nvidia and other Big Tech stocks earlier this year. As the company that’s cornered the market on AI chips, Nvidia has a lot riding on the tens of billions that tech giants are planning to plow into AI infrastructure this year. But DeepSeek’s efficiency measures—if its budget disclosures indeed hold water—raised questions about whether that scale was even necessary. “It was a shock to the system in terms of realizing that you didn’t have to maintain the current course of spending more, faster,” Alvin Nguyen, senior analyst at Forrester Research, told Tech Brew. Except that: One issue with that narrative, though, according to Nguyen, is that Nvidia’s customers are largely hyperscalers or other deep-pocketed buyers ready to shell out for the best of the best when it comes to AI infrastructure. Keep reading here.—PK |