Nvidia Corp.'s Jensen Huang has steadily climbed the ranks of the world's wealthiest as the market value of his computer-chip maker touches $3 trillion.
Huang hit another milestone on Friday, passing personal computer pioneer Michael Dell to become the world's 13th-richest person with a net worth of $106.1 billion, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index. His wealth has surged more than $62 billion this year as demand for Nvidia chips used to power artificial intelligence tasks remains insatiable.
Huang, 61, is leading a new wave of tech billionaires as AI-fueled "Jensanity," as one analyst termed it, takes over Silicon Valley. Other beneficiaries include Lisa Su, chief executive officer of Advanced Micro Devices Inc., as well as Super Micro Computer Inc.'s Charles Liang. Last month, Huang's fortune surpassed each individual member of the Waltons, America's richest family following another blowout quarter from the chipmaker.
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Dell, 59, with a net worth of $105.9 billion, has been a computer hardware-industry outlier among the tech super-rich, which often owe wealth to software companies. Dell made much of his fortune through his namesake firm, which sells personal computers and servers.
Still, Dell Technologies Inc. has been a beneficiary of the recent AI success as corporations need servers and other infrastructure to utilize advanced chips from Nvidia. Investors have increasingly seen Dell, along with Super Micro, as Nvidia's chosen partner for this business line.
In early March, Dell joined the small group of people with fortunes exceeding $100 billion as the company's shares rose to a record high. The stock has since retreated after posting results that disappointed investors, reducing its founder's wealth almost $12 billion in a single day.
Nvidia today commands an ecosystem of hardware and software solutions that rivals from AMD to Intel Corp. are trying hard to break up or replicate, thanks to its dominant share of the market for the high-end accelerators used to train AI.
And it has shown no signs of slowing down or letting its rivals catch up. Huang said the firm plans to upgrade its so-called AI accelerators every year.
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