Nvidia quashes rumor it’s planning to purchase a major PC manufacturer — says that it’s ‘not engaged in discussions to acquire any PC maker’
HP and Dell shares jumped by more than 5% after the rumor circulated.
Nvidia has issued a statement to Tom's Hardware denying that it has been in talks for over a year to purchase a major PC manufacturer — responding to a rumor published by SemiAccurate that the AI chipmaker is close to a decision on whether the deal will push through.
The tech publication said it has spent over a year following this story, ever since it caught wind of the potential deal in late 2024. SemiAccurate also added that it was just talks, and there’s no guarantee that a transaction will even materialize. We have followed up with Nviida for a clarifying question as to whether Nvidia is in discussions with a server OEM, as mentioned in the original report.
“The media report is false; Nvidia is not engaged in discussions to acquire any PC maker,” an Nvidia spokesperson told Tom’s Hardware. Nvidia was a relatively niche computer parts manufacturer with a share price of less than a dollar until cryptocurrency mining put it in the spotlight. Everything changed when OpenAI released ChatGPT near the end of 2022, leading to a technology race between AI companies looking to create the most powerful AI model. Nvidia was perfectly positioned when this happened, and it became the biggest company selling the proverbial shovel in the AI gold rush.
This rush has allowed the company’s stock price to skyrocket, turning it from a relatively unknown GPU manufacturer to the most valuable company on Earth. The massive hoard of money that Nvidia made from selling its chips has allowed it to go on a shopping and investment spree. It has purchased AI chip startup Groq for $20 billion, took a $2 billion stake on Synopsis, sank another $4 billion into photonics firms, and invested $2 billion on Marvell to deepen their NVLink Fusion partnership — all of which has been reported in the last six months.
Aside from that, Nvidia is expected to launch its N1/N1X Arm processors for laptops in 2026, with the next-generation N2 slated to arrive next year.
J.P. Morgan said in late 2025 that the company is planning to go beyond AI GPUs and components and into complete AI servers. The rumor that Nvidia is looking to purchase a PC manufacturer seems less far-fetched when you combine this with Team Green’s push into CPUs and SoCs. The rumor resulted in a jump of more than 5% for both HP and Dell — two major PC manufacturers whose product lines cover both PCs and servers.
Nvidia has denied the story, however, saying that it did not enter into talks at all. This is probably good news for many of Nvidia’s partners, as the company building its own servers would have seen the company competing directly with its customers. And even if a deal was pushed through, it would have faced deep scrutiny by industry watchdogs and regulators.
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Jowi Morales is a tech enthusiast with years of experience working in the industry. He’s been writing with several tech publications since 2021, where he’s been interested in tech hardware and consumer electronics.
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Roland Of Gilead ReplyNvidia was a relatively niche computer parts manufacturer with a share price of less than a dollar until cryptocurrency mining put it in the spotlight.
Huh!? The crypto scene really happened in and about 2017. The suggestion that NVIDIA was before then, a less than a dollar per share company, is pure fantasy. Seriously!
Niche, C'mon! -
M0rtis Reply
Yeah its absolute rubbish. I remember buying nVidia shares for $20 ish in 2005 and selling them for around $80 in 2006 which paid for my masters degree in 2007. LOLRoland Of Gilead said:Huh!? The crypto scene really happened in and about 2017. The suggestion that NVIDIA was before then, a less than a dollar per share company, is pure fantasy. Seriously!
Niche, C'mon! -
derekullo I'll admit I am/was an Nvidia fanboy growing upReply
Geforce 2 MX, Geforce 3 Ti 500, Geforce 5900 Ultra, GTX 285, Geforce 780 TI, Geforce 1060, Geforce 3080 TI
I guess if you consider PC gaming a niche then they did essentially own that niche.
ATI historically had buggy drivers and not enough money to devote to R&D and ... writing drivers.
This of course changed when AMD bought ATI and were able to inject much needed cash into the process.
Nvidia's market cap at the end of 2015 was about $17 billion.
Growing to over $4 Trillion by 2025 was unexpected! -
-Fran- Come on now. We all know nVidia will buy that promising start up Intel.Reply
I'm just joking... I hope...
Regards. -
Eximo ReplyPEnns said:Dell (proprietary everything!) and the smaller fish (everything with "Power" in their name has major issues!) but stay away from MSI and Asus....😀
If you think Nvidia, the king of proprietary GPU/Graphics/AI tech won't go all out on making everything proprietary... Heck, they've even made their vBIOS tools proprietary. I'm surprised they haven't announced ceasing partner production of PCIe cards in favor of their all proprietary server solutions.
I don't know why any company looking to manufacture hardware would go to assembly only companies like CyberPower and iBuyPower, kind of pointless.
If they were shopping around, they would be better off looking at some of the OEM suppliers for laptop boards/chassis. Many of the brands mentioned here also purchase from the likes of Clevo, but many just outsource to Foxconn. Given their vast partnerships with their GPU suppliers like PNY and Foxconn, it would make more sense for them to just keep doing that rather than acquiring. Who knows if their embedded CPU/GPU will really take off with consumers. -
PSUpower Replyderekullo said:Growing to over $4 billion by 2025 was unexpected!
I’m sure you meant trillion. -
JamesJones44 Buying a server maker doesn't make sense. Why go from a fairly high margin GPU designer to a low margin server hardware vendor? That would just be bad business. They would be better off buying a CPU designer and moving into the CPU market which is also high to medium in terms of margin.Reply
Obviously they tried this with ARM, but a smaller designer could be had and with the money Nvidia has plus expertise in providing designs for TSMC they could make it viable. Look at what Apple did with PA Semi and Qualcomm with NUVIA. These are the avenues I would spend money on if it were me. -
sharkbaitnate84 Nvidia has never, In its entire existence, traded below $1. So just blatantly false text here.Either someone didnt bother to fact check or they asked AI and didnt read that they adjust for splits.Reply