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Baird has reiterated its Outperform rating on Nvidia shares with a $300.00 price target. The chipmaker currently has a market capitalization of $4.41 trillion, trades at a price-to-earnings ratio of 36.93, and has delivered strong revenue growth of 65% over the past twelve months.
As part of strategic agreements, Nvidia is investing $2 billion each in Lumentum Holdings and Coherent Corp to strengthen optical technologies used in AI infrastructure and data centers. The non-exclusive agreements include multi-billion-dollar purchase commitments and rights to secure future production capacity for advanced laser components and optical networking products. The investment will help both Lumentum and Coherent expand research and development, future capacity, and U.S.-based manufacturing.
Baird cautioned that the interwoven investments within the AI ecosystem — aimed at securing capacity or supporting customer deployments — could increase systemic risk in the event of a future economic downturn.
Recent developments in high-speed AI connectivity include Qualcomm’s acquisition of Alphawave to gain high-speed interconnect intellectual property such as SerDes, and Credo’s recent acquisition of Hyperlume to obtain optical interconnect technology for chip-to-chip communication.
UBS also reaffirmed its Buy rating on Nvidia, citing growth prospects in networking and strong expansion plans by hyperscale cloud providers to build AI computing capacity. Morgan Stanley maintained its Overweight rating, although it shifted its top semiconductor pick to other companies based on expectations of AI-driven earnings leverage. Meanwhile, Nokia highlighted its collaboration with Nvidia on AI RAN technology at the Mobile World Congress, though no new partnership was announced. These developments underscore Nvidia’s proactive efforts to expand technology partnerships and strategic investments.
Reports indicate that the Trump administration has discussed limiting Chinese companies’ purchases of Nvidia’s H200 chips to 75,000 units per customer. This proposed cap is less than half of what companies such as Alibaba and ByteDance have reportedly expressed interest in purchasing privately. These accelerator chips are used to develop and run AI models.
Total shipments to China could still reach up to 1 million units, which was an earlier ceiling set during the regulatory process. However, given that most demand currently comes from a small number of Chinese technology giants, imposing per-customer caps could restrict these firms to acquiring only several hundred thousand chips in aggregate.
Market Interpretation:
Nvidia has emphasized that optical technology is becoming central to AI infrastructure deployment and is likely to replace copper cabling at speeds above 400G per channel. As supplies of pluggable transceivers tighten, companies are expanding their intellectual property portfolios and integrating optical technologies into their vertical models, signaling that high-speed optical networking is set to become a core pillar of next-generation AI infrastructure.








