Analysts weigh in on Nvidia’s $100B OpenAI investment and strategic compute pact

Nvidia’s decision to invest up to $100 billion in OpenAI — securing at least 10 gigawatts of compute capacity — is being hailed as a power play that cements its dominance in AI infrastructure. But analysts caution the partnership also carries risks of overexposure and market concentration.

Matt Britzman, Hargreaves Lansdown:
Britzman called the deal a “huge prize” for Nvidia, estimating each gigawatt of AI data center capacity could equate to $50 billion in revenue. By tying OpenAI closely to its hardware and software ecosystem, Nvidia raises the stakes for rivals, ensuring GPUs remain the foundation of next-gen AI.

Jacob Bourne, eMarketer:
Bourne said the move reassures investors about Nvidia’s long-term demand pipeline while fending off competitive threats from rival chipmakers or Big Tech’s in-house chips. For OpenAI, the deal signals growing independence from Microsoft as it diversifies funding and resources.

Anshel Sag, Moor Insights & Strategy:
Sag highlighted the long-standing relationship between the firms, saying this validates Nvidia’s growth targets while giving OpenAI the scale to serve even larger customers.

Ben Bajarin, Creative Strategies:
Bajarin described the partnership as practical: Nvidia is simply enabling OpenAI to meet surging demand for GPUs, which remain its core compute backbone.

Kim Forrest, Bokeh Capital:
Forrest was more skeptical, warning that “being totally linked with each other” risks short-sightedness and could open doors for competitors to court other AI companies. She also questioned whether large language models (LLMs) will ultimately deliver the sweeping productivity gains many expect.

Gil Luria, D.A. Davidson:
Luria suggested Nvidia may be acting as the “investor of last resort,” propping up OpenAI’s heavy spending commitments rather than purely chasing opportunity.

David Wagner, Aptus Capital Advisors:
Wagner said the investment reflects CEO Jensen Huang’s long-term vision of building out “AI factories,” though the timing came earlier than many anticipated.

Stacy Rasgon, Bernstein:
Rasgon noted the partnership helps OpenAI pursue its ambitious compute goals while ensuring Nvidia hardware powers the expansion. But he flagged “circular” concerns about whether Nvidia is essentially financing its own demand, a critique that could intensify.

The mixed reactions underscore the scale of Nvidia’s gamble: a bet that doubling down on OpenAI — while fending off rivals — will extend its dominance in the AI era, even as questions linger over long-term sustainability.

T-Mobile appoints Srini Gopalan as new CEO to navigate competitive U.S. telecom market

T-Mobile announced that insider Srinivasan “Srini” Gopalan will become CEO on November 1, succeeding Mike Sievert, as the company sharpens its strategy to maintain 5G leadership in a crowded U.S. wireless market.

The transition comes amid slowing subscriber growth, heightened competition, and more price-sensitive consumers. T-Mobile has leaned on aggressive promotions, bundled perks, and streaming partnerships to gain share, rising to become the nation’s second-largest wireless carrier behind Verizon during Sievert’s tenure.

Sievert, who took over in 2020 after T-Mobile’s $26 billion merger with Sprint, will move to the newly created role of vice chairman, advising on long-term strategy, innovation, and talent development. His leadership saw T-Mobile outperform both AT&T and Verizon in stock performance.

Gopalan, currently T-Mobile’s COO, brings deep telecom and financial expertise, with past leadership roles at Vodafone, Capital One, Bharti Airtel, and most recently as CEO of Deutsche Telekom Germany, where he doubled growth and expanded the fiber business. Analysts, including MoffettNathanson’s Craig Moffett, said the handover is expected to be smooth, with little disruption to performance.

When asked about future M&A activity, Gopalan stressed that T-Mobile’s focus will be on spectrum investment and fiber expansion rather than new consolidation moves.

This change marks a pivotal moment as T-Mobile works to protect its 5G advantage and balance growth in both postpaid and prepaid markets amid shifting consumer dynamics.

Ramaswamy-backed Strive to acquire Semler in $1.3B all-stock deal, boosting Bitcoin treasury

Strive, the bitcoin-treasury company co-founded by former U.S. presidential candidate Vivek Ramaswamy, announced it will acquire Semler Scientific in an all-stock transaction valued at $1.34 billion. The deal gives Strive a bigger foothold in both healthcare and cryptocurrency, while sharply expanding its bitcoin holdings.

Semler shareholders will receive 21.04 Strive Class A shares for each Semler share, valuing Semler at $90.52—a more than 210% premium over its prior close. Following the announcement, Semler’s stock jumped 8.3% in early trading, while Strive shares slipped 8%.

The combined company will own over 10,900 bitcoin after Strive’s planned purchase of 5,816 additional coins worth about $675 million. Strive said it will use a “preferred equity only” funding model for future bitcoin acquisitions, signaling a commitment to building one of the largest corporate crypto treasuries.

Semler, based in healthcare technology, develops diagnostic tools including a point-of-care test that measures arterial blood flow in extremities. Its mix of medical business and bitcoin reserves makes it a unique acquisition target.

The deal follows Strive’s merger with Asset Entities earlier this year as part of its Nasdaq listing strategy. It mirrors the bitcoin-first treasury approach pioneered by Michael Saylor’s MicroStrategy, which began buying bitcoin with cash reserves in 2020.

Bitcoin has surged 20.5% in 2025, outpacing the S&P 500’s 13.3% gain, amid easing regulatory concerns and growing institutional adoption. Ramaswamy, a vocal crypto advocate, founded Strive in 2022 after launching drugmaker Roivant Sciences in 2014. He stepped away from Roivant’s board in 2023 to focus on politics.

Cantor Fitzgerald advised Strive on the deal, while LionTree Advisors represented Semler.