Nvidia and Meta announced a major expansion of their partnership late Tuesday, with Meta committing to deploy millions of Nvidia’s Blackwell and Rubin GPUs, along with CPUs and networking products across its data centers.
The deal covers both AI model training and inference — the process of running AI models once trained. Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang called out Meta’s scale directly, saying no company deploys AI at the same level.
NVIDIA Corporation, NVDA
No financial terms were disclosed. However, HSBC estimates a single GB300 NVL72 rack — containing 72 of Nvidia’s GPUs — costs around $3 million. Susquehanna analyst Christopher Rolland estimated this week that the upcoming Rubin hardware will carry an average selling price roughly 40% higher than current systems. Meta confirmed it will deploy GB300-based systems.
The partnership directly addresses one of the bigger overhangs on Nvidia’s stock. Back in November, The Information reported that Meta was in talks with Google to use its TPU chips for AI workloads. Google’s TPUs are designed in collaboration with Broadcom, and the competitive threat had been cited as a reason Nvidia’s stock had stalled.
This deal essentially pushes that concern aside — at least for now.
Nvidia stock is still down more than 1% year to date, while AMD has dropped over 5% in the same period. AI-related stocks broadly have struggled in 2026, with Microsoft down more than 17% since January 1 and Meta off about 3.3%.
Meta is also rolling out Nvidia’s first large-scale Grace CPU-only servers, with plans to add Vera CPU-only systems in 2027. Those servers would handle tasks currently done by Intel and AMD chips — putting both companies in an uncomfortable spot.
There was at least one loser in Tuesday’s announcement. Arista Networks fell 3.2% in after-hours trading after Meta said it would integrate Nvidia’s Spectrum-X Ethernet switches into its infrastructure. Arista counts Meta as one of its largest clients, so the shift toward Nvidia’s own networking products is a direct hit.
Meta will also use Nvidia’s Confidential Computing feature — which enables private data processing via GPUs — inside its WhatsApp messaging app.
Nvidia’s Cloud Partner program, which includes CoreWeave and Crusoe, will also play a role, with Meta able to access additional chip capacity through those hosted platforms.
Nvidia closed Tuesday at $184.97, up 1.20%, before rising another 1.51% in overnight trading to $187.77.
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