Nvidia Has Placed $40 Billion in Bets Across the AI Infrastructure Stack

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Nvidia infrastructure investments 40 billion AI stack equity stakes 2026

Nvidia has committed more than $40 billion in equity stakes and investment agreements across the AI infrastructure stack in 2026, surpassing that figure this week with two new deals. On May 8, Nvidia agreed to invest up to $2.1 billion in data center operator IREN. In return, IREN will deploy up to 5 gigawatts of Nvidia’s DSX-branded infrastructure globally. A day earlier, Nvidia struck a deal to invest up to $3.2 billion in Corning. Corning is building three new US facilities dedicated to optical technologies for Nvidia’s rack-scale systems.

The two deals, however, continue a pattern Nvidia has been accelerating throughout 2026. Earlier in the year, it invested $2 billion each in CoreWeave, Nebius Group, Marvell Technology, Lumentum, and Coherent. The strategy spans, notably, neoclouds, optical component makers, silicon photonics developers, and now data center operators. Nvidia has consequently positioned itself as a financial stakeholder across every layer of the infrastructure its GPUs require.

The Circular Investment Debate

The investment strategy has drawn pointed commentary from analysts. Mizuho analyst Jordan Klein called the component maker deals smart, noting they accelerate critical technologies in short supply. He is, however, more skeptical of the neocloud investments, writing that they smell like pre-funding the purchase of your own GPUs. If the cycle turns, the market will question how much demand was organic versus Nvidia-supported. Ben Bajarin at Creative Strategies shared a similar concern. If the cycle turns, he noted, the market will question how much demand was organic versus Nvidia-supported.

Nvidia’s counter-argument is, however, implicit in the deal structures. The neoclouds and data center operators it backs hold the two assets Nvidia most needs: power and physical data center capacity. An equity relationship with those operators is, consequently, a hedge against infrastructure constraints that could slow GPU deployment. As we have covered in our analysis of how sovereign wealth funds are reshaping AI infrastructure investment, the largest players in AI infrastructure are increasingly using capital deployment as a strategic tool rather than a purely financial one. Nvidia’s $40 billion commitment is the most concentrated example of that dynamic in the current cycle.

Beyond Chips

The Corning deal is, specifically, the most strategically revealing of all recent announcements. Nvidia is shifting toward fiber-optic interconnects over copper as it builds out rack-scale systems. The investment, specifically, secures domestic supply of a component Nvidia’s next-generation architecture depends on. The move reflects a broader pattern. Nvidia is, in turn, shifting from a company that sells chips into the AI market to one that shapes the conditions under which that market develops. As we have covered in our analysis of AI compute moving beyond chips to controlling the stack, the competitive advantage in AI infrastructure is increasingly about vertical integration rather than component performance alone.

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