Jensen Huang, chief executive officer of Nvidia Corp., speaks to members of the media prior to the keynote address at the Nvidia AI summit in Washington, DC, US, on Tuesday, Oct. 28, 2025.
Kent Nishimura | Bloomberg | Getty Images
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang said at the company’s GTC conference on Tuesday that its Blackwell graphics processing units — the company’s fastest AI chips — are now in full production in Arizona.
Previously, Nvidia’s fastest GPUs were solely manufactured in Taiwan.
Huang said that President Donald Trump had asked him nine months ago to bring manufacturing back to U.S. shores.
“The first thing that President Trump asked me for is bring manufacturing back,” Huang said. “Bring manufacturing back because it’s necessary for national security. Bring manufacturing back because we want the jobs. We want that part of the economy.”
Earlier this month, Nvidia and Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company announced that the first Blackwell wafers had been produced in a facility in Phoenix, Arizona. Wafers are the base material on which semiconductors are etched onto.
Nvidia said in a video that Blackwell-based systems will now be assembled in the U.S., too.
Much of what the company announced on Tuesday at its conference in Washington was for an audience of policymakers to convince them of the essential role that Nvidia plays, and that it would hurt U.S. interests to restrict its exports.
Huang said on Tuesday on a panel before his speech that Nvidia was holding its conference in Washington to allow Trump to attend, according to CNBC’s Kristina Partsinevelos, but the president is currently on a trip in Asia.
Trump said on Tuesday that he planned to meet with Huang on Wednesday, according to a Reuters report.
Demand for the company’s GPUs remains high, with 6 million Blackwell GPUs shipped in the last four quarters, Huang said Tuesday. Nvidia expects $500 billion in GPU sales between the Blackwell generation and next year’s Rubin chips combined, he added.
Cell networks ‘built on foreign technologies’
Additionally, Huang Tuesday said Nvidia would partner with Finland-based Nokia to build gear for telecommunications, an industry that he said was worth $3 trillion. As part of the partnership, Nvidia will take a $1 billion stake in Nokia.
Huang said that Nvidia is building chips for 5G and 6G base stations because it’s important to have wireless networks based on American technology.
“Thank you for helping the United States bring telecommunication technology back to America,” Huang said to Nokia CEO Justin Hotard during his speech.
The deal is an appeal to Western policymakers who have long had concerns about the amount of technology from China’s Huawei that is used for cellular networks around the world.
“Our fundamental communication fabric is built on foreign technologies,” Huang said. “That has to stop, and we have an opportunity to do that, especially during this fundamental platform shift.”
Nokia will use Nvidia chips in its future base stations, which are the pricey computers that distribute cellular signals. Huawei gear, the market leader, was effectively banned in the U.S. in 2018, leaving Nokia and Ericcson as the primary equipment vendors for U.S. networks.
Huang said that Nokia would be using a new product called Nvidia ARC that combines its Grace GPU, a Blackwell GPU and the company’s networking parts. Huang said that AI delivered over next-generation 6G networks could help operate robots and deliver more accurate weather forecasts.
Stakes are high
The location of the conference carries significance as Nvidia makes the case that it is a core part of the “U.S technology stack.”
Huang has argued that it would be better for American interests if Chinese AI developers got used to U.S. technology like Nvidia’s chips, rather than forcing the Chinese to develop their own AI chips.
“Nvidia is a proud American company building the U.S. AI infrastructure that will ensure our country leads the world in shaping the future of innovation,” Kari Briski, Nvidia’s vice president of generative AI software for enterprise, told reporters on a Monday call.
The stakes are high for Nvidia. U.S. export restrictions have already cost Nvidia billions of dollars in lost sales.
In April, the U.S. government informed Nvidia that its H20 chip, which was specially designed to comply with U.S. export controls, would require a license to ship to China. In May, Nvidia said it would have recorded about $10.5 billion in H20 sales over two quarters if the government hadn’t made the license requirement.
Then, in July, Huang visited Trump in Washington and again tried to persuade him and other administration officials that it is in U.S. interests to ship Nvidia chips to China. The Trump administration said it would approve license requests for the H20, but that Nvidia would have to pay the U.S. government 15% of China sales.
Still, Nvidia’s China business isn’t yet back on track.
Earlier this month, Huang said at a financial conference that Nvidia is currently “100% out of China” and has no market share there. While Nvidia said it would receive licenses for the H20 chip, the company hasn’t revealed a newer chip for China based on the company’s current generation of Blackwell GPUs.
Quantum computing
Many of Nvidia’s announcements on Tuesday were partnerships intended to signal that the company works with a variety of U.S. companies.
Among those announcements was NVQLink, a new way to connect quantum chips to Nvidia’s GPUs.
The U.S. having a lead in quantum computing is important to policymakers because military officials are worried that a foreign adversary may be able to spy on military communications if it gets a working quantum computer first.
Nvidia officials said in a Monday call that its chips can be used to correct errors that pop up during quantum computing and advance the technology. Nvidia said that 17 different quantum computing startups would produce hardware compatible with NVQLink.
“Researchers will be able to do more than just error correction,” Huang said Tuesday. “They will also be able to orchestrate quantum devices and AI supercomputers to run quantum GPU applications.”
Nvidia also said it will partner with the Department of Energy to build seven new supercomputers.
Mark Zuckerberg, chief executive officer of Meta Platforms Inc., wears a pair of Meta Ray-Ban Display AI glasses during the Meta Connect event in Menlo Park, California, US, on Wednesday, Sept. 17, 2025.
David Paul Morris | Bloomberg | Getty Images
Meta continues to sink money into the metaverse, anchored by virtual reality and augmented reality technologies.
The company reported third-quarter earnings on Wednesday and said that the Reality Labs division recorded an operating loss of $4.4 billion while generating $470 million in sales during the period.
Wall Street was expecting Reality Labs to post an operating loss of $5.1 billion on $316 million in revenue.
The Reality Labs unit is responsible for developing the company’s Quest-branded family of VR headsets and Ray-Ban and Oakley AI smart glasses that Meta develops in partnership with eyewear giant EssilorLuxottica.
The company’s Reality Labs division has now recorded over $70 billion in cumulative losses since late 2020, underscoring the high costs of building VR, AR and other consumer hardware.
Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg in September revealed the $799 Meta Ray-Ban Display glasses, which are the company’s first consumer-ready AI glasses that include a built-in display and an accompanying wristband with neural technology.
EssilorLuxottica said in its most recent earnings report earlier this month that those AI glasses helped lift its sales in the third quarter.
“Clearly there is a lift coming from Ray-Ban Meta wearables as a product category,” EssilorLuxottica CFO Stefano Grassi said during a third-quarter earnings call.
With Meta’s AI glasses becoming a surprise hit, investors have been monitoring for any signs that the company may be shifting its metaverse strategy.
Meta on Monday said that Vishal Shah, who was leading its metaverse initiatives, is now a vice president of AI products in the company’s Superintelligence Labs division that works on AI.
Bill McDermott, chief executive officer of ServiceNow Inc., during the Allen & Co. Media and Technology Conference in Sun Valley, Idaho, US, on Thursday, July 10, 2025.
David Paul Morris | Bloomberg | Getty Images
ServiceNow reported third-quarter results on Wednesday that blew past Wall Street’s estimates, with the company also approving a five-for-one stock split.
Shares rose 4% after the bell.
Here’s how the company did versus LSEG estimates.
Earnings per share: $4.82 adjusted vs. $4.27 expected
Revenue: $3.41 billion vs. $3.35 billion expected
Third-quarter subscription revenues, which account for the bulk of the enterprise software company’s sales, totalled $3.3 billion and surpassed a $3.26 billion estimate from StreetAccount. Overall revenues grew 22% from the year-ago period.
ServiceNow bumped up full-year guidance, saying it now expects subscription revenue to range between $12.84 billion and $12.85 billion for the year. Last quarter, the company raised FY guidance to a range of $12.78 billion to $12.80 billion.
Like many software companies, ServiceNow is benefitting from the artificial intelligence transformation that’s forcing more businesses to adopt the tools.
“Every enterprise in every industry is focused on AI as the innovation opportunity of our generation,” wrote CEO Bill McDermott in a release. He called the results the “clearest demonstration” that businesses are relying on ServiceNow for these capabilities.
Read more CNBC tech news
Finance chief Gina Mastantuono told CNBC that the annual contract value for ServiceNow’s AI business is projected to surpass $500 million this year and on track toward the goal set at its investor day to reach $1 billion by 2026.
“The value AI is going to create in enterprise is like nothing that we’ve seen in a very, very long time,” she said. “We have real customers, it’s not just hype, and we have real values and we’re driving real outcomes for those customers.”
Net income hit $502 million, or $2.40 per share, up from $432 million, or $2.07 per share, during the same quarter in 2024. Current remaining performance obligations reached $11.35 billion.
ServiceNow said its fourth-quarter guidance accounts for ongoing U.S. government uncertainty and the recent shutdown. The company expects $3.42 billion to $3.43 billion in subscription revenues.
“Whenever the government reopens, the administration’s continued focus on cost efficiency and modernization aligns directly with our strengths,” she said, adding that ServiceNow’s U.S. federal business grew more than 30% in the third quarter.
ServiceNow’s board also approved a five-for-one stock split slated for the beginning of December. Mastantuono said the split will make shares accessible to more retail investors.
Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell speaks during a news conference following a meeting of the Federal Open Market Committee at the Federal Reserve on Oct. 29, 2025 in Washington, DC.
Alex Wong | Getty Images
Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell said on Wednesday that the artificial intelligence boom is different from the dotcom bubble of the late 1990s.
“This is different in the sense that these companies, the companies that are so highly valued, actually have earnings and stuff like that,” Powell said, during a news conference following the Fed’s two-day policy meeting.
AI investments in data centers and chips are also a major source of economic growth, he said. In the dotcom era, numerous companies raced to big valuations before going bankrupt due to hefty losses.
Powell didn’t name specific vendors, but chipmaker Nvidia has emerged as the world’s most valuable company, surpassing $5 trillion in market cap. The rally has been driven by the company’s graphics processing units, which are at the heart of AI models and workloads.
However, while Nvidia is generating big profits, high-valued startups OpenAI and Anthropic have been burning cash as they develop and expand their services.
OpenAI has racked up $1 trillion in AI deals of late, despite being set to generate only $13 billion in annual revenue. Anthropic, which is at a $7 billion revenue run rate, last week announced an estimated $50 billion cloud partnership with Google.