Top headlines at a glance
- Huang’s China comments — and clarification. After reports that CEO Jensen Huang said “China is going to win the AI race,” Nvidia pointed to his follow-up post saying China is “nanoseconds behind America” and urged the U.S. to “race ahead” by winning developers worldwide. Reuters also notes his remarks came amid ongoing U.S. export limits and recent political statements about restricting top-end GPUs. [1]
- Prestige U.K. honors for Nvidia leadership. Jensen Huang and Chief Scientist Bill Dally were named laureates of the 2025 Queen Elizabeth Prize for Engineering for foundational work in accelerated computing; Huang also received the Professor Stephen Hawking Fellowship at the Cambridge Union during a week of AI-focused events in London. [2]
- Ecosystem deal of the day.VAST Data signed a $1.17 billion multi‑year agreement with CoreWeave to serve as the neocloud’s primary data platform—another sign of heavy build‑out around Nvidia-powered AI infrastructure. (Both firms have deep ties to Nvidia’s ecosystem and investors.) [3]
What changed today — and why it matters
1) Huang’s China remarks move from sound bite to strategy
Reuters reports that Huang’s “China will win” comment—made on the sidelines of the FT Future of AI Summit—was followed hours later by a clarification on X emphasizing that America can win by accelerating innovation and courting global developers, including those in China. He reiterated that policy should avoid ceding half the world’s AI developer base. The report also notes U.S. export controls remain a flashpoint; Nvidia hasn’t sought China licenses, and recent comments by the U.S. president about reserving top Blackwell chips for domestic customers underscore the policy uncertainty surrounding Nvidia’s fastest GPUs. Takeaway: today’s messaging tries to align geopolitics with Nvidia’s developer‑first strategy while sidestepping direct sales into China. [4]
2) International recognition bolsters Nvidia’s “national infrastructure” narrative
This afternoon, Nvidia’s blog confirmed Huang and Dally received the 2025 Queen Elizabeth Prize for Engineering for accelerated computing—technology that underpins modern AI. The QEPrize site lists both leaders among seven laureates, and U.K. outlets reported the King discussed AI risks with honorees during the ceremony. Why investors care: awards aren’t revenue, but they reinforce Nvidia’s position at the core of AI’s hardware+software stack and support its global government and academia relationships that often precede datacenter and research deployments. [5]
3) The build‑out keeps building: VAST Data–CoreWeave $1.17B pact
Reuters’ exclusive says AI storage/software vendor VAST Data and neocloud CoreWeave deepened their partnership via a $1.17B contract, aligning product roadmaps to move training data faster to GPU clusters. VAST previously disclosed $200M ARR and positive FCF; Reuters has reported Nvidia and CapitalG discussed participating in its next raise—context for why a large, long‑dated contract matters. Why this touches NVDA: CoreWeave’s growth is tightly coupled to Nvidia GPU capacity; deals that improve GPU utilization (I/O, storage, data management) help keep Nvidia systems “sweating” and can pull forward demand for more accelerators and networking. [6]
Market context
- AI-levered equities wobble, but NVDA stays a bellwether. Reuters flagged renewed volatility in AI‑linked names this week; that macro backdrop, plus headline risk around export policy, is keeping day‑to‑day swings elevated. [7]
- Policy watch — UAE export licenses (this week’s context). Earlier this week, the U.S. cleared Microsoft to ship tens of thousands of Nvidia GB300‑class chips to the UAE under strict safeguards, part of a multi‑year infrastructure investment. While not today’s news, it frames the policy reality behind Huang’s developer‑access argument. [8]
NVDA: levels and catalysts to watch
- Price & range: As of ~13:36 UTC, NVDA was trading around $195. Recent 52‑week range has spanned roughly $86.6–$212.2, per Reuters. Short‑term flows remain sensitive to AI‑macro headlines and Blackwell shipment chatter. [9]
- Earnings date set: Nvidia will report Q3 FY2026 results on Wednesday, Nov. 19 at 2:00 p.m. PT (with CFO commentary posted before the call). Expect updates on Blackwell/GB300 ramps, supply, and demand visibility into 2026. [10]
Analyst takeaway (editorial)
- Narrative today: Nvidia is simultaneously a technology standard, a geopolitical focal point, and a cultural symbol of the AI age. Today’s UK honors amplify the first; Huang’s clarification tries to calm the third; and the VAST–CoreWeave deal shows the second—AI infrastructure build‑out—continues, regardless of market jitters.
- What would move the stock next: concrete data on Blackwell yields/shipments, networking availability, and gross‑margin cadence; evidence of new sovereign/DOE‑scale wins; and any change to U.S. export posture that affects non‑China markets (e.g., the UAE green‑light). [11]
Sources & timestamps (Nov. 6, 2025 unless noted)
- Reuters recap of Huang’s remarks and clarification; export‑policy backdrop. [12]
- Nvidia blog confirming QEPrize and Hawking Fellowship; event details. [13]
- QEPrize official site listing 2025 laureates. [14]
- PA Media/Yahoo Finance UK on the King’s AI discussions at the ceremony. [15]
- Reuters exclusive: VAST Data–CoreWeave $1.17B agreement. [16]
- Reuters: AI‑stock volatility context this week. [17]
- Reuters/AP (this week): U.S. license enabling Microsoft to ship Nvidia GB300‑class chips to UAE. [18]
- Nvidia Investor Relations: Q3 FY26 earnings call on Nov. 19. [19]
Disclosure: This article is for information and news purposes only and is not investment advice.
References
1. www.reuters.com, 2. blogs.nvidia.com, 3. www.reuters.com, 4. www.reuters.com, 5. blogs.nvidia.com, 6. www.reuters.com, 7. www.reuters.com, 8. www.reuters.com, 9. www.reuters.com, 10. investor.nvidia.com, 11. www.reuters.com, 12. www.reuters.com, 13. blogs.nvidia.com, 14. qeprize.org, 15. uk.finance.yahoo.com, 16. www.reuters.com, 17. www.reuters.com, 18. www.reuters.com, 19. investor.nvidia.com


