CayChan
12-25

Summary

Nvidia, Joining Big Tech Deal Spree, to License Groq Technology, Hire Executives

Nvidia's licenses chip tech for inference

Groq's leadership transition to Nvidia raises questions about future independence

Nvidia's strategic hires reflect trend of acquiring talent without full acquisitions

(Reuters) - Nvidia has agreed to license chip technology from startup Groq and hire away its CEO, a veteran of Alphabet's Google, Groq said in a blog post on Wednesday.

The deal follows a familiar pattern in recent years where the world's biggest technology firms pay large sums in deals with promising startups to take their technology and talent but stop short of formally acquiring the target.

Groq specializes in what is known as inference, where artificial intelligence models that have already been trained respond to requests from users. While Nvidia dominates the market for training AI models, it faces much more competition in inference, where traditional rivals such as Advanced Micro Devices (AMD.O), opens new tab have aimed to challenge it as well as startups such as Groq and Cerebras Systems.

Nvidia has agreed to a "non-exclusive" license to Groq's technology, Groq said. It said its founder Jonathan Ross, who helped Google start its AI chip program, as well as Groq President Sunny Madra and other members of its engineering team, will join Nvidia.

A person close to Nvidia confirmed the licensing agreement.

Groq did not disclose financial details of the deal. CNBC reported that Nvidia had agreed to acquire Groq for $20 billion in cash, but neither Nvidia nor Groq commented on the report. Groq said in its blog post that it will continue to operate as an independent company with Simon Edwards as CEO and that its cloud business will continue operating.

In similar recent deals, Microsoft's top AI executive came through a $650 million deal with a startup that was billed as a licensing fee, and Meta spent $15 billion to hire Scale AI's CEO without acquiring the entire firm. Amazon hired away founders from Adept AI, and Nvidia did a similar deal this year. The deals have faced scrutiny by regulators, though none has yet been unwound.

"Antitrust would seem to be the primary risk here, though structuring the deal as a non-exclusive license may keep the fiction of competition alive (even as Groq’s leadership and, we would presume, technical talent move over to Nvidia)," Bernstein analyst Stacy Rasgon wrote in a note to clients on Wednesday after Groq's announcement. And Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang's "relationship with the Trump administration appears among the strongest of the key US tech companies."

Groq more than doubled its valuation to $6.9 billion from $2.8 billion in August last year, following a $750 million funding round in September.

Groq is one of a number of upstarts that do not use external high-bandwidth memory chips, freeing them from the memory crunch affecting the global chip industry. The approach, which uses a form of on-chip memory called SRAM, helps speed up interactions with chatbots and other AI models but also limits the size of the model that can be served.

Groq's primary rival in the approach is Cerebras Systems, which Reuters this month reported plans to go public as soon as next year. Groq and Cerebras have signed large deals in the Middle East.

Nvidia's Huang spent much of his biggest keynote speech of 2025 arguing that Nvidia would be able to maintain its lead as AI markets shift from training to inference

Nvidia's $20 billion acquisition of Groq and reaches a technology licensing and team integration agreement to drive shares higher
Nvidia will acquire Groq, a high-performance artificial intelligence acceleration chip design company, for about $20 billion in cash, making it its largest acquisition deal ever. Groq was founded by the former Google TPU core team and focuses on the design of high-performance AI accelerator chips. At the same time, Nvidia and Groq reached a non-exclusive reasoning technology licensing agreement. Groq's founder and senior management team will join Nvidia to help promote the research and development and application of high-performance and low-cost reasoning technology and consolidate Nvidia's leading position in the field of AI reasoning. The deal could face regulatory scrutiny. Nvidia's opening stock price rose more than 1%, confirming that it has reached a non-exclusive technology licensing agreement with AI chip startup Groq, and recruited engineering talents from Groq, driving the stock price up. This cooperation marks the arrival of the era of AI reasoning, and at the same time attracts market attention to the challenges that Nvidia's high gross profit capabilities may face.
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