Nvidia (NVDA) stock is up about 15.44% year to date, at the time of writing, Friday afternoon, May 29. Meanwhile, the SPDR S&P 500 index (SPY) is up about 11.06% in the same period.
While the stock has outpaced the S&P 500, its growth is lagging that of other semiconductor companies that are part of the AI boom.
Here are the gains other semiconductor companies achieved in the same period:
Sandisk (SNDK) is up 608.5%.
Micron (MU) is up 238%.
Intel (INTC) is up 221.64%.
Advanced Micro Devices (AMD) is up 140.23%.
Marvell (MRVL) is up 138.14%.
Broadcom (AVGO) is up 26.2%.
When we see the big gains achieved by some of these companies, especially Intel, things start to look strange.
Intel reported a GAAP net loss of $3.73 billion, yet it has rallied like crazy. Meanwhile, Nvidia reported very strong earnings and announced a big dividend increase, yet it dropped.
There are two reasons holding the stock back. It is already held by most institutional investors. The other reason might be the upcoming big IPOs of SpaceX, OpenAI, and Anthropic.
We need to remember that the SoftBank Group sold all its Nvidia shares in November 2025 and dumped that money into OpenAI.
Something similar may be going on now with the “hottest” IPOs this year.
Nevertheless, Nvidia is now mounting an attack that aims to turn it into an unstoppable force in the semiconductor industry.
Nvidia delivers its first Vera CPUs
Nvidia confirmed that the first Vera CPUs arrived at Anthropic, OpenAI, and SpaceXAI on May 15th. Three days later, Oracle got its units, too.
There are several reasons why this CPU launch is a game-changer for Nvidia. The company says that Vera is “the world’s first processor purpose-built for the age of agentic AI and reinforcement learning.”
What makes this CPU different is that, unlike the previous-generation Grace CPU, which was built on ARM’s Neoverse V2 cores, this one features Nvidia’s custom “Olympus” cores (also based on the ARM architecture).
The Vera CPU features 88 Olympus cores and, according to Nvidia, delivers twice the performance of the Grace CPU and is the first CPU to support FP8 precision.
Related: Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang delivers sharp message to major customer
The importance of the Vera CPU was explained by Nvidia’s EVP and CFO, Colette Kress, during the first quarter earnings call:
“Vera CPU opens a brand-new $200 billion [total addressable market (TAM)] for Nvidia, a market we have never addressed before. Every major hyperscale and system maker is partnering with us to get it deployed. We have visibility to nearly $20 billion in total CPU revenue this year, setting us up to become the [world ’s] leading CPU supplier.”
