Nvidia's Jensen Huang says Marvell could be the next trillion-dollar company; stock jumps 18%
Nvidia's CEO, Jensen Huang, hailed this chip designer as the next trillion-dollar firm, sending its shares up sharply in early market trading.
Jensen Huang, chief executive officer of Nvidia Corp., speaks at the Nvidia GTC conference on the sidelines of Computex 2026 in Taipei, Taiwan, on Monday, June 1, 2026.
Lam Yik Fei | Bloomberg | Getty Images
Nvidia's CEO Jensen Huang hailed Marvell Technology as the next trillion-dollar firm, sending its shares up sharply in premarket trading Tuesday.
The semiconductor firm, which designs chips for data centers, soared after Huang touted the company's efforts in supplying the AI infrastructure build-out during an onstage appearance with Marvell CEO Matthew Murphy at Computex Week in Taipei on Monday.
Marvell is set to be the "next trillion-dollar company," Huang said, adding that the company's networking and connectivity chips are essential to data centers where computing tasks are spread across thousands of connected chips that need to share data quickly.
Marvell Technology shares year-to-date.
"When you take a computing problem, and you disaggregate it into a lot of parts, and you distribute it across the entire data center, what's necessary is connectivity," Huang said. "That's the reason why Matt's doing so well. That's the reason why Marvel is so essential."
"We've distributed and disaggregated computing so that it runs across these enormous clusters, so that we could get aggregating the total compute, the total memory, the total bandwidth that we have, and what makes it possible is connectivity," the Nvidia CEO added.
Marvell specializes in designing high-performance chips used in global data infrastructure, including cloud computing, AI, enterprise networking, 5G carrier networks and automotive systems.
The company's 2027 first-quarter earnings beat analyst estimates in May. Marvell posted $2.4 billion in revenue, and it forecast continued revenue growth for the fiscal year due to strength in its data center business.
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