Zinger Key Points
- Trump administration struck a deal to send 500K Nvidia AI chips yearly to UAE through 2027, possibly extending to 2030.
- UAE firm G42 gets 100K chips annually; the rest go to U.S. tech giants like Microsoft and Oracle building UAE data centers.
- Don’t miss this list of 3 high-yield stocks—including one delivering over 10%—built for income in today’s chaotic market.
The Trump administration forged a preliminary deal with the United Arab Emirates involving importing 500,000 of Nvidia Inc.’s NVDA advanced AI chips annually.
The deal was at least through 2027 but could be in place until 2030, Reuters reported on Wednesday, citing unnamed sources familiar with the matter.
Under the deal, 20% of the chips, or 100,000 of them per year, will serve UAE’s tech firm G42, while the rest would be split among U.S. companies, including Microsoft Corp MSFT and Oracle Corp ORCL that might also seek to build data centers in the UAE.
Also Read: Nvidia, AMD And Other Chip Stocks Gain As Trump Plans To Ease AI Chip Export Rules
U.S. President Donald Trump is on a tour of the Gulf region this week and on Tuesday announced a $600 billion investment package from Saudi Arabia. The package includes massive AI infrastructure partnerships with Nvidia, Advanced Micro Devices AMD, and Qualcomm Inc QCOM.
Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund subsidiary HUMAIN will construct AI factories across Saudi Arabia over the next five years, powered by Nvidia’s most advanced GPUs.
The factories’ projected total capacity is up to 500 megawatts. HUMAIN will also introduce Saudi Arabia’s first Nvidia Omniverse Cloud platform.
Bank of America Securities analyst Vivek Arya expects the HUMAIN deals to range between $2 billion and $3 billion annually, likely starting in 2025, with a total of between $15 billion and $20 billion over a multi-year period.
NVIDIA Stock Prediction For 2025
Equity research analysts on and off Wall Street typically use earnings growth and fundamental research as a form of valuation and forecasting. But many in trading turn to technical analysis as a way to form predictive models for share price trajectory.
Some investors look to trends to help forecast where they believe a stock could trade at a certain point in the future. Looking at NVIDIA, an investor could make an assessment about a stock's long term prospects using a moving average and trend line. If they believe a stock will remain above the moving average, which many believe is a bullish signal, they can extrapolate that trend into the future using a trend line. For NVIDIA, the 200-day moving average sits at $125.33, according to Benzinga Pro, which is below the current price of $133.04. For more on charts and trend lines, see a description here.
Traders believe that when a stock is above its moving average, it is a generally bullish signal, and when it crosses below, it is a more negative signal. Investors could use trend lines to make an educated guess about where a stock could trade at a later date if conditions remain stable.
Price Actions: NVDA stock is down 1.40% at $133.45 at the last check on Thursday.
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