Nvidia is projected to generate near $60 billion in free cash flow in its fiscal 2025 year.
Investors fretting that Nvidia’s massive stock buyback allocation would leave it short of funds for vital research and development should take heart from the chipmaker’s swelling free cash flow.
For others, that was missing the point. The company’s leadership in components that underpin the infrastructure being put in place for artificial intelligence systems is set to generate so much free cash that it can still afford to invest to keep its technological lead and reward shareholders. Ultimately, it’s Nvidia’s ability to spend as much as — or more — than would-be rivals such as Advanced Micro Devices and Intel that’ll help produce products that are ahead and keep the orders rolling in.
Intel, which unlike the other two, still manufactures its own chips, is spending heavily to restore its production technology to leadership and to upgrade a wider range of products to make them competitive again.For now, Wall Street likes Nvidia’s chances of continuing to outpace a company that was until recently the world’s largest chipmaker for more than two decades.
Malaysia Latest News, Malaysia Headlines
Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.
Best-selling waterproof picnic mat set to take off as temperatures soarThe soft, cotton blankets are $60 each.
Read more »
Greens to tap into renters’ anger to boost their numbers at the 2025 electionLabor and Liberal electorates in inner Melbourne, Sydney and the NSW Northern Rivers region are in the sights of Greens leader Adam Bandt.
Read more »
Claims CIA members were bribed to cover up COVID origin findingsClaims have emerged of a cover-up at the Central Intelligence Agency on the origins of COVID after members of a team charged with investigating the matter were allegedly bribed to change their conclusion. The investigation was to determine whether COVID-19 came from the Wuhan Institute of Virology or emerged naturally. The Select Subcommittee on the Coronavirus Pandemic and the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence wrote to the CIA saying a whistleblower had come forward to provide information regarding the Agency's analysis. They revealed that, according to the whistleblower, six of the seven members of the team “believed the intelligence and the science were sufficient to make a low-confidence assessment that COVID-19 originated from a laboratory in Wuhan, China”. The letter said the whistleblower claims the six members were given a significant monetary incentive to change their position.
Read more »
Letby inquiry must also examine NHS ‘cover-up culture’, says ombudsmanExclusive: Rob Behrens wants inquiry to look into why hospital chiefs often ignore safety concerns and victimise whistleblowers
Read more »
Wake-up calls, patriarchy and parking: hard questions at the HeraldReading a book about Eileen O’Shaughnessy, the “invisible” wife of George Orwell, has prompted an examination of what stories we cover, and what we might have missed.
Read more »
Your housemate is a nightmare. Can you do anything about it?The dishes are piling up by the sink. They haven’t cleaned the bathroom in weeks. Then you’re asked to cover their rent. When sharing a house can go horribly wrong.
Read more »