Featured Article

Nvidia could be primed to be the next AWS

There are a lot of parallels in the two companies’ growth trajectories

Kommentar

Man riding a rocket ship.
Image Credits: erhui1979 / Getty Images

Nvidia and Amazon Web Services, the lucrative cloud arm of Amazon, have a surprising amount in common. For starters, their core businesses emerged from a happy accident. For AWS, it was realizing that it could sell the internal services — storage, compute and memory — that it had created for itself in-house. For Nvidia, it was the fact that the GPU, created for gaming purposes, was also well suited to processing AI workloads.

That eventually led to some explosively growing revenue in recent quarters. Nvidia’s revenue has been growing at triple digits, moving from $7.1 billion in Q1 2024 to $22.1 billion Q4 2024. That’s a pretty amazing trajectory, although the vast majority of that growth was in the company’s data center business.

While Amazon never experienced that kind of intense growth spurt, it has consistently been a big revenue driver for the e-commerce giant, and both companies have experienced first market advantage. Over the years, though, Microsoft and Google have joined the market creating the Big Three cloud vendors, and it is expected that other chip makers will eventually begin to gain meaningful market share, too, even as the revenue pie continues to grow over the next several years.

Both companies were clearly in the right place at the right time. As web apps and mobile began emerging around 2010, the cloud provided the on-demand resources. Enterprises soon began to see the value of moving workloads or building applications in the cloud, rather than running their own data centers. Similarly, as AI took off over the last decade, and large language models more recently, it coincided with the explosion in the use of GPUs to process these workloads.

Over the years, AWS has grown into a tremendously profitable business, currently on a run rate close to $100 billion, one that even separate from Amazon would be a highly successful company. But AWS growth has begun to slow down, even as Nvidia’s takes off. It’s partly the law of large numbers, something that will eventually affect Nvidia, too.

The question is whether Nvidia can sustain that growth to become a long-term revenue powerhouse like AWS has become for Amazon. If the GPU market begins to tighten, Nvidia does have other businesses, but as this chart shows, these are much smaller revenue generators that are growing much more slowly than the GPU data center business currently is.

Nvidia revenue chart organized by revenue type and amount by quarter.
Image Credits: Nvidia
Image Credits: Nvidia

The short-term financial outlook

As the above chart notes, Nvida’s revenue growth has been astronomical in recent quarters. And according to both Nvidia and Wall Street analysts, it’s set to continue.

In its recent earnings report covering the fourth quarter of its fiscal 2024 (the three months ending January 31, 2024), Nvidia told its investors that it anticipates $24 billion worth of revenue in its current quarter (Q1 FY25). Compared to its year-ago first quarter, Nvidia expects to post growth of around 234%.

That is simply not a number we often see from mature public companies. However, given the company’s massive revenue ramp in recent quarters, its growth rate is expected to decline. From a 22% revenue gain from the third to fourth quarter of its recently concluded fiscal year, Nvidia anticipates a more modest 8.6% growth rate from the final quarter of its fiscal 2024 to the first of its fiscal 2025. Certainly, on a year-over-year comparison and not a look back at just three months, Nvidia’s growth rate remains incredible for the current period. But there are other growth declines on the horizon.

For example, analysts expect Nvidia to generate $110.5 billion worth of revenue in its current fiscal year, up just over 81% from its year-ago results. That’s dramatically lower than the 126% gain it posted in its recently concluded fiscal 2024.

To which we ask: So what? For at least the next several quarters, Nvidia is expected to continue scaling its revenue past the $100 billion annual run rate mark, impressive for a company that in its year-ago period today saw total revenues of just $7.19 billion.

In short, analysts, and to a more modest degree Nvidia, see huge buckets of growth ahead for the company, even if some of the eye-popping revenue growth figures will slow this calendar year. It’s unclear what happens on a slightly longer timeframe.

Momentum ahead

It seems that AI could be the gift that keeps on giving for Nvidia for the next several years, even as more competition from AMD, Intel and other chipmakers begins to emerge. Much like AWS, Nvidia will face stiffer competition eventually, but it controls so much of the market right now, it can afford to cede some.

Looking at it purely at the chip level, not at boards or other adjacencies, IDC shows Nvidia firmly in control:

Chart showing Nvidia leading pure GPU chip market with 97.7%
Image Credits: IDC
Image Credits: IDC

If you look at the board level with these market share numbers from Jon Peddie Research (JPR), a firm that tracks the GPU market, while Nvidia still dominates, AMD is coming on stronger:

Graph show percentage of GPU market divided by top three vendors: Nvidia, AMD and Intel
Image Credits: Jon Peddie Research
Image Credits: Jon Peddie Research

C Robert Dow, an analyst at JPR, says some of these fluctuations have to do with when new products are introduced. “AMD gains percentage points here and there depending on cycles in the market — when new cards are introduced — and inventory levels, but Nvidia has been in a dominant position for years, and that will continue,” Dow told TechCrunch.

Shane Rau, an IDC analyst who follows the silicon market, also expects the dominance to continue, even as trends shift and change. “There are trends and countertrends, the markets in which Nvidia participates are big and getting bigger, and growth will continue, at least for another five years,” Rau said.

Part of the reason for that is Nvidia is selling more than just the chip itself. “They’ll sell you boards, systems, software, services and time on one of their own supercomputers. So any of those markets are big and growing and Nvidia is attached to all of them,” he said.

But not everyone sees Nvidia as an unstoppable force. David Linthicum, a longtime cloud consultant and author, says that you don’t always need GPUs, and companies are beginning to realize that. “They say they need GPUs. I look at it, do some of the back of the envelope math, and they don’t need them. CPUs are perfectly fine,” he said.

As this happens, he thinks Nvidia will begin to slow down and competition will loosen its stronghold on the market. “I think that we’re going to see Nvidia morph into a weaker player over the next couple of years. And we’re going to see that because there’s too many substitutes that are being built out there.”

Rau says other vendors will also benefit as companies expand AI use cases with Nvidia products. “What I think you’ll see going forward is growing markets that’ll create tailwinds for Nvidia. But then there’ll be other companies that also follow in those tailwinds that will benefit from AI particularly.”

It’s also possible that some disruptive force will come into play and that would be a positive outcome to keep one company from becoming too dominant. “You almost hope disruption will happen because that’s the way markets and capitalism work best, right? Someone gets an early lead, other suppliers follow, the market grows. You get established players, who are eventually disrupted by a better way to do the same thing within their market or within adjacent markets that are crossing into theirs,” Rau said.

In fact, we are beginning to see that happening at Amazon as Microsoft gains ground via its relationship with OpenAI and Amazon is forced to play catch-up when it comes to AI. Whatever happens to Nvidia in the long run, it’s firmly in the driver’s seat right now, making money hand over fist, dominating a growing market and having just about everything going its way. But that doesn’t mean it will always be this way or that there won’t be more competitive pressure down the road.

More TechCrunch

In early 2018, VC Mike Moritz wrote in the FT that “Silicon Valley would be wise to follow China’s lead,” noting the pace of work at tech companies was “furious”…

This is how bad China’s startup scene looks now

Fei-Fei Li, the Stanford professor many deem the “Godmother of AI,” has raised $230 million for her new startup, World Labs, from backers including Andreessen Horowitz, NEA, and Radical Ventures.…

Fei-Fei Li’s World Labs comes out of stealth with $230M in funding

Bolt says it has settled its long-standing lawsuit with its investor Activant Capital. One-click payments startup Bolt is settling the suit by buying out the investor’s stake “after which Activant…

Fintech Bolt is buying out the investor suing over Ryan Breslow’s $30M loan

The rise of neobanks has been fascinating to witness, as a number of companies in recent years have grown from merely challenging traditional banks to being massive players in and…

Dave and Varo Bank execs are coming to TechCrunch Disrupt 2024

OpenAI released its new o1 models on Thursday, giving ChatGPT users their first chance to try AI models that pause to “think” before they answer. There’s been a lot of…

First impressions of OpenAI o1: An AI designed to overthink it

Featured Article

Investors rebel as TuSimple pivots from self-driving trucks to AI gaming

TuSimple, once a buzzy startup considered a leader in self-driving trucks, is trying to move its assets to China to fund a new AI-generated animation and video game business. The pivot has not only puzzled and enraged several shareholders, but also threatens to pull the company back into a legal…

Investors rebel as TuSimple pivots from self-driving trucks to AI gaming

Welcome to Startups Weekly — your weekly recap of everything you can’t miss from the world of startups. Want it in your inbox every Friday? Sign up here. This week…

Some startups and investors are more risk-averse than others

Silicon Valley startup accelerator Y Combinator will expand the number of cohorts it runs each year from two to four starting in 2025, Bloomberg reported Thursday, and TechCrunch confirmed today.…

Y Combinator expanding to four cohorts a year in 2025

Telegram has had a tough few weeks. The messaging app’s founder, Pavel Durov, was arrested in late August and later released on a €5 million bail in France, charged with…

Telegram CEO Durov’s arrest hasn’t dampened enthusiasm for its TON blockchain

Martin Casado, a general partner at Andreessen Horowitz, will tackle one of the most pressing issues facing today’s tech world — AI regulation — only at TechCrunch Disrupt 2024, taking…

A fireside chat with Andreessen Horowitz partner Martin Casado at TechCrunch Disrupt 2024

Christina Cacioppo, CEO and co-founder of Vanta, will be on the SaaS Stage at TechCrunch Disrupt 2024 to reveal how Vanta is redefining security and compliance automation and driving innovation…

Vanta’s Christina Cacioppo takes the stage at TechCrunch Disrupt 2024

On Thursday, cybersecurity giant Fortinet disclosed a breach involving customer data.  In a statement posted online, Fortinet said an individual intruder accessed “a limited number of files” stored on a…

Fortinet confirms customer data breach

Meta has confirmed that it’s restarting efforts to train its AI systems using public Facebook and Instagram posts from its U.K. userbase. The company claims it has “incorporated regulatory feedback” into a…

Meta reignites plans to train AI using UK users’ public Facebook and Instagram posts

Following the moves of other tech giants, Spotify announced on Friday it’s introducing in-app parental controls in the form of “managed accounts” for listeners under the age of 13. The…

Spotify begins piloting parent-managed accounts for kids on family plans

Uber users in Austin and Atlanta will be able to hail Waymo robotaxis through the app in early 2025 as part of a partnership between the two companies. 

Waymo robotaxis to become available on Uber in Austin, Atlanta in early 2025

There are plenty of calendar and scheduling apps that take care of your professional life and help you slot in meetings with your teammates and work collaborators. Howbout is all…

Howbout raises $8M from Goodwater to build a calendar that you can share with your friends

Delhivery claims Ecom Express has inaccurately represented Delhivery’s business metrics when drawing comparisons in its IPO filing. 

SoftBank-backed Delhivery contests metrics in rival Ecom Express’ IPO filing

It was a matter of time, but Apple is going to allow third-party app stores on the iPad starting next week, on September 16. This change will occur with the…

Alternative app stores will be allowed on Apple iPad in the EU from September 16

The U.K.’s antitrust regulator has delivered its provisional ruling in a longstanding battle to combine two of the country’s major telecommunication operators. The Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) says that…

Three and Vodafone’s $19B merger hits the skids as UK rules the deal would adversely impact customers and MVNOs

Late Thursday evening, Oprah Winfrey aired a special on AI, appropriately titled “AI and the Future of Us.” Guests included OpenAI CEO Sam Altman, tech influencer Marques Brownlee, and current…

Oprah just had an AI special with Sam Altman and Bill Gates — here are the highlights

Antonio Moraes, the grandson of a late prominent Brazilian billionaire, was never interested in joining the family-owned conglomerate of construction companies and a bank. Shortly after graduating from college, he…

XP Health grabs $33M to bring employees more affordable vision care

A crew of four private astronauts made history in the early hours of Thursday when they opened the hatch of their SpaceX Dragon capsule and conducted the first commercial spacewalk. …

Polaris Dawn astronauts perform historic private spacewalk while wearing SpaceX-made suits

Keith Rabois, managing director of Khosla Ventures, was having dinner with a “very successful CEO” in October 2018 when the CEO asked him a question: How many people does it…

Keith Rabois says Miami is still a great place for startups, even as a16z leaves

By making the AI info label harder to find, it might be easier for users to be deceived by content that was edited with AI, especially as editing tools become…

Meta is making its AI info label less visible on content edited or modified by AI tools

Cohost, a would-be X rival launched to the public in June 2022, is shutting down, the company announced via the social network’s staff account earlier this week. The service had…

Cohost, the X rival founded with an anti-Big Tech manifesto, is running out of money and will shut down

At the MTV Video Music Awards (VMAs) on Wednesday night, new technology allowed fans to shop their favorite artists’ styles as they appeared on the screen. Though the drama from…

Shopsense AI lets music fans buy dupes inspired by red-carpet looks at the VMAs

Featured Article

A comprehensive list of 2024 tech layoffs

A complete list of all the known layoffs in tech, from Big Tech to startups, broken down by month throughout 2024.

A comprehensive list of 2024 tech layoffs

Working away on his PhD in Munich only a few years ago, Stephan Herrmann (now a doctor) couldn’t have conceived of a time when his idea for a carbon-negative power…

This startup is making manure out of other biogas power plants and now has $62M to play with

ChatGPT, OpenAI’s text-generating AI chatbot, has taken the world by storm since its launch in November 2022. What started as a tool to hyper-charge productivity through writing essays and code…

ChatGPT: Everything you need to know about the AI-powered chatbot

Faraday Future is doling out big raises and bonuses to its CEO and its founder, despite having delivered just 13 cars in its 10-year history and recently laying off or…

Faraday Future gives CEO and founder raises and bonuses after delivering 13 cars