Nvidia has done something it rarely does.
It has spent big.
This week, the company agreed to acquire key assets from AI chip startup Groq in a deal valued at around $20 billion. It is Nvidia’s largest transaction on record.
That alone tells us something important.
Before deciding what this means for long-term investors, it’s worth stepping back and looking at the direction of travel. This is exactly the kind of structural shift we try to flag early in our free research on long-term technology winners.
What’s actually happening here?
This is not a conventional takeover.
Nvidia is not buying Groq outright. Instead, it is acquiring its low-latency inference technology and bringing Groq’s senior engineers in-house.
Groq will continue to exist. But the most valuable part of what it built is now sitting inside Nvidia.
That matters because inference, not training, is becoming the bottleneck in AI.
AI inference is the moment when a trained model is actually used to generate an answer, prediction, or decision. It happens far more often than training and is where real-world demand for fast, efficient chips shows up.
Training models is expensive but episodic. Inference runs every time someone asks an AI a question. That is where scale, efficiency, and margins will be decided.
Nvidia knows this.
Why Nvidia is doing this now
For years, Nvidia’s dominance came from training chips.
That phase is maturing.
The next phase is about real-time AI, embedded everywhere. Data centres. Networks. Enterprise systems. Edge devices.
Groq specialised in ultra-low latency inference. That makes Nvidia’s platform broader and stickier.
In simple terms, this is about control.
By owning more of the AI stack, Nvidia makes it harder for customers to mix and match suppliers. Switching costs rise. Competitors struggle to differentiate.
This is not flashy. But it is powerful.
What still works in Nvidia’s favour
Nvidia is not short of money.
It ended October with over $60bn in cash and short-term investments. This deal barely dents that.
More importantly, Nvidia is not chasing unproven revenue. It is reinforcing an existing ecosystem that customers already depend on.
This is what strong incumbents do when they see a threat forming.
They don’t wait.
What worries me
There are real risks.
First, integration risk. Buying assets and talent is not the same as building culture. Nvidia has executed well before, but at this scale mistakes matter.
Second, scrutiny. Deals like this will not go unnoticed by regulators, especially if Nvidia’s market share in AI infrastructure keeps climbing.
Third, expectations. Nvidia’s valuation already assumes years of strong execution. Any slowdown in AI spending, even temporary, could hit sentiment.
These risks are not hypothetical. They are part of owning a dominant stock.
Looking ahead in 2026
For this move to pay off, three things need to hold.
AI workloads must keep shifting toward inference. Nvidia must integrate Groq’s technology smoothly. And customers must keep choosing Nvidia as their default platform.
If those boxes are ticked, this deal will look obvious in hindsight.
If not, it will be remembered as a sign Nvidia was already playing defence.
Either way, it confirms something important.
The AI build-out is moving from hype to infrastructure. And Nvidia is positioning itself at the centre of that shift.
Final view
I still see Nvidia as a core infrastructure business, not a speculative AI play.
That does not mean it is risk-free. It means it should be judged like critical infrastructure, not a momentum trade.
For new capital, selectivity matters more than excitement.
And Nvidia is no longer the only way to express this theme.
Where this leaves investors
The biggest technology winners over the next cycle are unlikely to be the loudest names.
They will be the companies supplying the infrastructure that quietly becomes essential, long before the story is obvious.
That’s the thinking behind our free report, Seven AI Stocks for 2026, where we look beyond the usual headlines and focus on durability, valuation, and long-term relevance.
If you want to see how we approach these decisions in more depth, you can read the full report here.
Disclosure: this article is for information only and does not constitute investment advice. Views reflect the author’s opinion at the time of writing. Investors should consider their own circumstances before making decisions. David has a position in Nvidia stock as of this writing.