---
title: "5 NVIDIA Developments Crypto Investors Are Tracking in 2026"
date: 2026-04-27
author: "Kathleen Kinder"
featured_image: "https://coinlaw.io/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/5-nvidia-developments-crypto-investors-are-quietly-tracking-in-2026-and-which-ones-actually-matter.jpg"
categories:
  - name: "Investments"
    url: "/investments.md"
tags:
  - name: "News"
    url: "/tag/news.md"
---

# 5 NVIDIA Developments Crypto Investors Are Tracking in 2026

Crypto investors have learned to read NVIDIA for signals that retail headlines miss. Its 2026 trajectory runs through AI data centers, memory supply chains, and a class-action overhang that traces back to the 2017 crypto boom.

## Key Points

- ARK Invest added to [NVIDIA](https://coinlaw.io/nvidia-nvda-stock-statistics/) three times in 2025: April ($18.9M), June ($18.5M), and November ($17.5M).
- NVIDIA is the #27 holding across ARK’s entire fund family, notable for a semiconductor name from a disruptive-software-focused manager.
- SK Hynix began rolling out SOCAMM2 memory modules in April 2026, aligned with NVIDIA’s latest chip architecture.
- A pending federal class action alleges NVIDIA obscured the share of GPU revenue from crypto mining during 2017-2018.
- Data center computing now represents approximately 87% of NVIDIA’s revenue, a sign the company has consolidated around AI compute.
- Memory supply, litigation overhang, and institutional positioning drive NVIDIA’s 2026 moves, not retail GPU demand.

## What Happened?

NVIDIA’s 2026 story is no longer about gaming GPUs; it is about the AI data-center rails that crypto and AI now share. ARK Invest is accumulating, SK Hynix is shipping new memory modules, and a 2018 federal class action over crypto-mining revenue disclosure remains active.

## 1. ARK Invest’s Steady NVIDIA Accumulation Through 2025

ARK Invest’s ARKK fund added to its NVIDIA position three times in 2025: April 8 ($18.9M), June 16 ($18.5M), and November 20 ($17.5M). Those are not one-off trades. They are a deliberate accumulation pattern during a year when NVIDIA’s valuation already looked stretched to most observers. NVIDIA is the #27 holding in ARK’s entire fund family, which is striking for a semiconductor name from an ETF manager historically focused on disruptive software.

For [crypto investors](https://coinlaw.io/cryptocurrency-adoption-by-institutional-investors-statistics/), ARK’s pattern matters because Cathie Wood’s team has been publicly bullish on the AI-to-crypto compute thesis: AI training and high-throughput blockchain infrastructure share the same data-center rails.

## 2. The SK Hynix Partnership Powering NVIDIA’s AI Chips

NVIDIA’s next-generation AI accelerators depend on high-bandwidth memory from South Korea’s SK Hynix. In [April 2026, SK Hynix began rolling out SOCAMM2 memory modules](https://coinlaw.io/nvidia-stock-sk-hynix-socamm2-ai-memory/) aligned with NVIDIA’s latest chip architecture. The memory supplier relationship is a choke point most retail investors do not see. If SK Hynix production slips, NVIDIA’s entire data-center revenue line slows with it.

The relevance for crypto investors: the same HBM memory that feeds AI training clusters also feeds the large-scale validator nodes running Ethereum, Solana, and modern [L2 infrastructure](https://coinlaw.io/layer-2-networks-adoption-statistics/). Memory availability is a shared constraint across both worlds.

## 3. The Crypto Mining Class Action That Still Hangs Over NVIDIA

NVIDIA has never fully escaped its 2018 crypto reporting controversy. A [federal class action alleges NVIDIA obscured the share](https://coinlaw.io/nvidia-class-action-crypto-revenue-lawsuit/) of its GeForce GPU revenue coming from crypto mining during the 2017-2018 boom. The case affects how the market reads every future NVIDIA disclosure involving crypto-linked demand.

This is not abstract. Any 2026 uptick in GPU mining for non-Bitcoin proof-of-work chains, or renewed demand from AI firms running dual-purpose hardware, will be scrutinized against the backdrop of this pending litigation.

## 4. Data Center Revenue at Roughly 87% of NVIDIA’s Business

NVIDIA’s revenue mix has consolidated around one segment. Data center computing now represents approximately 87% of NVIDIA’s business. Gaming, once the dominant segment, is now a minority line. This concentration is a double-edged sword: NVIDIA is not a diversified chip company anymore; it is an AI compute company with legacy hardware on the side.

For crypto investors, this means NVIDIA is less a hardware cyclical stock and more a leading indicator of enterprise AI spend, which correlates increasingly with institutional crypto infrastructure spend.

## 5. What 2026 Could Bring for Crypto-Adjacent Investors

The through-line across these four developments is that NVIDIA is the infrastructure beneath both AI and modern crypto. Data centers, memory supply, disclosure litigation, and institutional investor positioning all point to the same thing: the semiconductor layer that serves AI training clusters is the same layer that serves next-generation blockchain validator infrastructure.

Crypto investors watching NVIDIA in 2026 should track data-center earnings cadence, memory supply-chain news from Korea and Taiwan, and any institutional repositioning by ARK or similar active managers. The chipmaker’s next major price move will almost certainly originate in one of those four signals, not in retail GPU demand.

## CoinLaw’s Takeaway

NVIDIA is no longer a pure-play hardware stock, and it is not a pure-play AI stock either. For crypto-adjacent investors, it is the clearest publicly traded proxy for the compute infrastructure that both AI and modern blockchain increasingly depend on. The developments worth tracking are not headline price moves; they are the data-center revenue line, the memory partnerships, the disclosure litigation, and the institutional investors who keep buying regardless of the quarter-to-quarter narrative.

*Data in this report was cross-referenced against ARK Invest’s public trade disclosures (cathiesark.com), NVIDIA’s SEC 10-K filings, and SK Hynix’s official memory product announcements.*