NVIDIA has struck its largest deal ever, acquiring core assets and licensing AI inference technology from chip startup Groq in a bold $20 billion cash transaction.
Key Takeaways
- NVIDIA is acquiring nearly all assets of Groq in a $20 billion deal, excluding its GroqCloud business.
- The transaction emphasizes AI inference, with Groq’s low-latency chips set to be integrated into NVIDIA’s AI Factory architecture.
- Key Groq executives are joining NVIDIA, while Groq continues operating independently under a new CEO.
- Analysts remain bullish on NVIDIA, seeing the deal as a strategic move that supports long-term growth in the AI sector.
What Happened?
NVIDIA has finalized a $20 billion cash deal to acquire the core assets of Groq, an AI chip startup focused on inference workloads. The deal, which excludes Groq’s cloud services unit GroqCloud, also includes a non-exclusive license for Groq’s inference technology. Groq’s leadership, including founder Jonathan Ross and President Sunny Madra, will transition to NVIDIA, reinforcing the chipmaker’s focus on building talent and accelerating product development in the AI inference space.
Today Groq entered into a non-exclusive licensing agreement with Nvidia for Groq’s inference technology. Along with other members of the Groq team, I’ll be joining Nvidia to help integrate the licensed technology. GroqCloud will continue to operate without interruption.
— Jonathan Ross (@JonathanRoss321) December 24, 2025
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NVIDIA’s Strategic Play for AI Dominance
NVIDIA’s acquisition of Groq’s core assets reflects a well-calculated expansion into the rapidly growing AI inference market. Groq specializes in low-latency processors that are optimized for inference tasks in large language models, making it a valuable addition to NVIDIA’s AI infrastructure ambitions.
- Groq was founded in 2016 by former Google engineers including Jonathan Ross, who helped develop Google’s tensor processing unit (TPU).
- The company raised $750 million in September 2025, valuing it at approximately $6.9 billion.
- Groq’s projected 2025 revenue is around $500 million, driven by increasing demand for inference chips.
NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang stated in an internal email that Groq’s processors will be integrated into NVIDIA’s AI Factory platform to serve a broader range of AI inference and real-time workloads. While not acquiring Groq outright, NVIDIA is onboarding its talent and licensing its core technology.
The transaction structure is unique. Groq will remain an independent entity, with former CFO Simon Edwards stepping in as CEO. Meanwhile, NVIDIA will benefit from exclusive access to Groq’s engineering leadership and chip innovations.
Groq Was Not for Sale
Interestingly, Groq was not actively seeking acquisition. Disruptive CEO Alex Davis, whose firm led Groq’s latest funding round and invested over $500 million into the company, said the deal moved quickly once NVIDIA reached out. The deal covers nearly all of Groq’s assets, leaving GroqCloud untouched and still operational.
NVIDIA has adopted a similar approach in the past. In September 2025, it invested over $900 million in AI hardware startup Enfabrica, acquiring its CEO and core team while licensing the company’s technology. These talent-and-tech-centric deals show NVIDIA’s shift toward acquiring strategic assets without full corporate takeovers.
Strengthening Its AI Ecosystem
This acquisition aligns with NVIDIA’s broader strategy to dominate the AI infrastructure market.
- NVIDIA has also invested in AI startups such as Crusoe and Cohere.
- It increased its stake in cloud provider CoreWeave as it approached an IPO.
- The company has plans to invest up to $100 billion in OpenAI, with OpenAI committed to deploying 10 gigawatts of NVIDIA hardware.
- Another $5 billion investment in Intel was announced earlier this year as part of a partnership.
NVIDIA’s financial strength fuels this aggressive expansion. Its cash reserves and short-term investments reached $60.6 billion by October 2025, up from $13.3 billion in early 2023.
CoinLaw’s Takeaway
In my experience, deals like this are rare in both size and strategy. NVIDIA didn’t just buy a company, it bought the future of inference. By securing Groq’s cutting-edge IP and recruiting its top engineers, NVIDIA is doubling down on the future of AI beyond training into inference, where real-time applications are growing fastest. The fact that Groq wasn’t for sale yet still agreed to the deal says everything about NVIDIA’s persuasive pull and strategic clarity. I found this move incredibly savvy. It sets NVIDIA up not just as a GPU king but as a full-stack AI platform, capable of controlling both training and deployment phases. If you’re an investor looking long-term, this is the kind of move that changes the game.
