NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang Reflects on Selling Shares at $300M to Buy Parents a Mercedes S-Class After the IPO, Saying He Now Regrets the Timing

Muhammad Zuhair
NVIDIA's CEO Jensen Huang
Image Credits: NVIDIA

NVIDIA's CEO has recalled how he bought his parents a Mercedes S-Class by selling his shares after the IPO, when the company was valued at $300 million.

NVIDIA's CEO Believes AI Has Brought the World's Largest Infrastructure Buildout, and There's No Stopping Yet

NVIDIA is currently the world's largest company, valued at almost $5 trillion, and its valuation has been soaring ever since it jumped onto the AI bandwagon. Team Green powers nearly every current AI infrastructure, and the company is pivotal in the AI revolution right now. Speaking at the WEF with BlackRock's CEO Larry Fink, NVIDIA's Jensen Huang recounted how he sold some of the company's shares post-IPO to buy his parents a "nice" Mercedes S-Class, but the decision turned out to be costly.

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My only regret was at the IPO, after the IPO, I wanted to buy my parents something nice, and so I sold NVIDIA stock at a valuation of $300 million. The company was at a valuation of $300 million, and I bought them a Mercedes S-Class. It is the most expensive car in the world. They regret it.

- NVIDIA's Jensen Huang

Well, when it comes to decisions around NVIDIA's stock market pricing, many individuals out there have expressed their regret on not recognizing the AI hype early on, and another prominent example for this is SoftBank's CEO, who had sold his stake in NVIDIA that could now be worth "tens of billions". However, speaking about the fundamentals alone, NVIDIA's CEO says that the world is currently in the "largest infrastructure build-out in human history", driven by hyperscaler adoption, and how the progression of frontier models and the applications above it requires the need for compute capabilities.

But the important thing, though, because this computing platform requires all of the layers underneath it, it has started, and you guys are, everybody's seeing it right now, it has started the largest infrastructure build-out in human history. We're now a few hundred billion dollars into it. We're a few hundred billion dollars into it.

Larry and I, we get the opportunity to work on many projects together. There are trillions of dollars of infrastructure that needs to be built out, and it's sensible. It's sensible because all of these contexts have to be processed so that the AI, so that the models can generate the intelligence necessary to power the applications that ultimately sit on top.

- NVIDIA's Jensen Huang

Of course, there are concerns within the current infrastructure buildout, and it all depends on whether large-scale investments can effectively lead to widespread and consistent adoption of AI as a technology, which is why we are seeing agentic AI hype grow tremendously. NVIDIA sits in the center of what Jensen calls a "revolution", since it not only provides the necessary hardware to enable these innovations, but also frameworks in the form of NVIDIA's CUDA, Nemotron open-source LLMs, and several technologies. This ecosystem buildout has effectively translated into the company's stock valuation.

Muhammad Zuhair Photo

About the author: Muhammad Zuhair is a hardware and technology reporter for Wccftech, specializing in the semiconductor industry and the complex interplay between technology, manufacturing, and geopolitics. His coverage focuses on the corporate strategies and technological roadmaps of industry giants like TSMC, NVIDIA, Samsung, and Intel. Zuhair's expertise lies in deconstructing complex topics such as fabrication nodes (e.g., 2nm process), the economic impact of policies like the CHIPS Act, and the strategic development of AI infrastructure from NVIDIA, AMD and Intel.

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