Jensen Huang, the CEO of Nvidia, filed a report Friday stating that he sold 75,000 shares of the firm, which is worth around $12.94 million. He can progressively sell up to 6 million shares as part of a planned strategy that includes this transaction.
Just earlier this month, he offloaded 225,000 shares for roughly $37 million. That brings his total stock sales in July to over $49 million.
The timing lines up with Nvidia’s incredible momentum in the market. The company has been riding high on the surge in demand for AI chips due to its top-performing GPUs. Nvidia even crossed the $4 trillion mark in market value, briefly becoming the world’s most valuable company beating out both Apple and Microsoft.
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Huang, who co-founded Nvidia in 1993, has seen his personal wealth climb alongside the company’s success. His net worth has now soared past $100 billion, putting him among the wealthiest individuals globally. His leadership, especially in betting big on AI long before it became mainstream, is widely seen as a key reason behind Nvidia’s dominance today.
These stock sales were made under a pre-arranged plan and don’t appear to reflect any concerns about the company’s outlook. Given how Nvidia continues to lead the AI hardware space, this seems more like routine financial planning than a signal of trouble.
Nvidia’s momentum in the AI space doesn’t seem to be slowing down anytime soon. The demand for its chips is still climbing, and the company is landing major deals across different industries from healthcare to automotive and even, national AI infrastructure.
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In the medical field, Nvidia is now working with groups like IQVIA, Illumina, Mayo Clinic, and the Arc Institute to use AI for things like drug discovery, genomic research, and speeding up clinical trials. On the industrial side, big names like General Motors and Hyundai are using Nvidia’s tech to modernize their systems. GM is using platforms like Omniverse and DRIVE AGX to streamline factory operations and power smarter vehicles.
Meanwhile, Hyundai is using Nvidia’s tools to rethink manufacturing with robotics, simulation, and digital twin tech. And that’s not all on the global AI front, Nvidia has teamed up with Saudi Arabia’s HUMAIN to build large-scale AI hubs powered by tens of thousands of its Blackwell GPUs. One of the first projects includes an 18,000-GPU supercomputer meant to support everything from robotics to smart cities. All of this just shows that Nvidia isn’t just riding the AI trend and it’s helping build what comes next.