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Nvidia Faces Setbacks as Major Customers Delay Orders of Latest AI Racks Due to Overheating Issues

Nvidia is encountering challenges with its new ‘Blackwell’ AI racks, with major customers delaying their orders due to overheating issues, as reported by The Information on Monday. Shares of the Santa Clara-based company dropped more than 4% following the news.

The overheating problems reportedly affect the initial shipments of the racks, which house Nvidia’s chips in data centers. The glitches include issues with how the chips are connecting to each other. This problem has led major customers such as Microsoft, Amazon’s cloud division, Alphabet’s Google, and Meta Platforms to reduce their orders for the new racks.

Delayed Orders and Shift to Older Models

The affected customers, often referred to as hyperscalers, had placed substantial orders for the Blackwell racks, with each company initially committing $10 billion or more. Some are opting to delay their orders until a later version of the racks is available, while others are returning to older AI chip models.

Microsoft, for instance, had planned to deploy at least 50,000 Blackwell chips in a Phoenix facility, but due to the delays, OpenAI, one of its key partners, requested that Microsoft provide older ‘Hopper’ chips instead.

Despite these delays, it remains unclear how much this will impact Nvidia’s overall sales, as the company may still find other buyers for the affected racks. In November, Nvidia’s CEO Jensen Huang had expressed confidence that the company would exceed its target of generating billions of dollars in revenue from Blackwell chips during its fourth fiscal quarter.

Nvidia and Amazon declined to comment, while Microsoft, Google, and Meta did not immediately respond to Reuters’ inquiries.

 

Goodman Group Surges Amid Australian Data-Centre Expansion

Goodman Group’s stock has soared this year, outshining its Australian property peers thanks to its strategic push into the data-centre sector. The rising demand for artificial intelligence services has driven major cloud service providers, including Amazon, Microsoft, and Meta, to invest heavily in data centres. This trend has sparked a surge in Australia’s nascent data-centre market, with companies like Blackstone and NEXTDC also making significant investments.

Goodman Group, Australia’s largest property developer, counts leading global hyperscalers as customers. While the company has not disclosed the identities of these clients, its portfolio clearly reflects the growing need for data centres, with 42% of its A$12.8 billion portfolio under construction dedicated to these specialized facilities. This expansion has helped boost Goodman’s stock by 45.8% this year, positioning it for its best performance since 2006.

Despite the strong growth, some market analysts caution that the high valuations of data-centre-focused stocks might signal a cooling investor sentiment. Concerns include the potential for obsolescence in data-centre infrastructure and increased competition in the market. However, Goodman’s robust pipeline, access to land with power supply, and ongoing investment into the sector continue to fuel optimism about its future prospects.

 

NodeShift aims to rival hyperscalers with its decentralized cloud platform

NodeShift aims to democratize access to excess compute capacity beyond the large cloud providers by providing a single API to tap into resources from independent data center operators and decentralized web services like Akash and Filecoin. The company recently raised a $3.2 million seed funding round led by Inovo.vc, with participation from Notion Capital, 10X Founders, Kestrel0x1, and Epic Games. Devamını Oku