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Nvidia invests $2 billion in Synopsys, aims to turbo‑charge chip design with GPU‑AI power

In this post:

  • Nvidia bought $2 billion worth of Synopsys shares at $414.79 each to boost AI and chip design.

  • The partnership aims to speed up compute-heavy tasks using GPU power and expand joint AI services.

  • Synopsys stock rose 4% while Nvidia gained 1% after the announcement on Monday.

Nvidia moved on Monday with a $2 billion stock purchase in Synopsys, locking in a deeper partnership focused on faster computing and AI engineering. The shares were bought at $414.79 each, based on company figures.

The goal is to push heavy design work off slow systems and onto GPU‑powered workflows. The deal landed during another sharp week in the AI trade, with money still chasing anything tied to compute speed.

Markets reacted fast. Synopsys jumped 4% on the day. Nvidia rose 1%. The timing matters. The stock has climbed 33% this year, but it is also down nearly 12% this month. That swing shows how hot and unstable the AI space still is.

Nvidia keeps selling the tools that train large AI systems. Synopsys sells the software that builds the chips that run them.

Nvidia and Synopsys expand GPU‑driven design workloads

The partnership runs across several years and targets compute‑heavy applications, agentic AI tools, cloud access, and joint market efforts.

Nvidia will supply the hardware side. Synopsys will move more of its design stack onto accelerated systems. The focus stays on moving giant workloads faster, not on changing who sells what.

Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang spoke on CNBC the same day. He said the deal targets the design and engineering sector and called it one of the most compute‑intense industries in the world. He also said the industry is shifting away from CPU‑based systems toward GPU‑driven computing.

According to him, CPU systems will still exist, but most heavy work is moving to accelerated platforms.

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Synopsys CEO Sassine Ghazi added his own numbers. He said tasks that once ran for weeks can now finish in hours under the new setup.

That change impacts chip layout testing, silicon verification, power modeling, and system routing. These are the steps that slow hardware launches and drive costs higher.

The relationship between the two companies did not start this week. Huang said Nvidia itself was built using Synopsys design tools.

That history stays intact under this new deal. The agreement also stays non‑exclusive, meaning both sides can still work with other firms in the market at the same time.

Nvidia continues to profit from the AI build‑out because it sells the GPUs used to train models and run large workloads. Synopsys plays the other side by selling silicon design and electronic design automation software. Together, they target the full path from chip idea to deployed AI system.

Wall Street flags risks as competition and spending surge

While most firms on Wall Street stay bullish, Seaport stands alone with a sell rating on Nvidia. Analyst Jay Goldberg kept that rating in a Sunday note.

His $140 target sits about 21% below Friday’s $177 close. He wrote that while Nvidia’s business stays strong, the AI rush has created complex sales structures and unclear accounting patterns.

Goldberg pointed to $26 billion in prepaid cloud compute costs on Nvidia’s books. The company said that money supports research and cloud services tied to its DGX platform. Goldberg pushed back. He said research would not absorb that full amount.

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Instead, he described it as rebates tied to large buyer deals. Under those deals, customers that buy Nvidia systems receive promises that Nvidia will also buy excess capacity from them if needed.

Working capital at Nvidia has also risen sharply. The company says that signals strong demand. Goldberg treated it as a double-edged signal when paired with rising client commitments.

He said Nvidia spent $6 billion this year on private firms and holds another $17 billion in commitments, including $5 billion tied to Intel. He also flagged the OpenAI agreement, which remains unsigned and could add another $100 billion if finalized.

Goldberg said Nvidia may recover that money when those companies raise capital and buy more systems. Still, he warned that the scale of these moves signals growing pressure from other chip suppliers.

He also pointed to rising competition from Google’s in‑house TPUs. He wrote that these systems already beat Nvidia hardware on some measures, even though they cannot serve every client. He added that Google has become highly active in pushing TPU use to outside partners.

Out of 66 analysts covering Nvidia, 59 rate it buy or strong buy. Six rate it hold. Only one rates it underperform, and that remains Seaport, according to Tipranks data.

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