Wall Street Divided on Nvidia and OpenAI: AI Ecosystem Masterstroke vs. Next Cisco Bubble?

Source Tradingkey

TradingKey - Since September, a series of cross-investments and partnerships among major AI tech giants have unveiled a capital game that is as exciting as it is puzzling: OpenAI buys cloud capacity, Oracle buys chips, and Nvidia reinvests in OpenAI — forming an almost perfect “AI Circle.” But echoing the cautionary tale of Cisco’s “vendor financing” bubble, Wall Street is sounding alarm bells.

Recent multi-hundred-billion-dollar deals between OpenAI, Nvidia, and Oracle have created a triangular ecosystem encompassing large models, cloud infrastructure, and computing chips. The business chain works like this:

  • OpenAI, the world’s leading AI startup, purchases cloud services from Oracle
  • Oracle, as infrastructure provider, builds data centers requiring massive volumes of Nvidia GPUs
  • Nvidia, having earned profits, strategically invests part of them back into OpenAI

In this seemingly flawless “AI Circle”, questions remain about OpenAI’s long-term stability, given it is still years away from profitability and faces intensifying competition from Google and Anthropic.

Some analysts describe this “ONO” alliance (OpenAI-Nvidia-Oracle) as a high-stakes, “chained-together” bet — where success is mandatory, and failure could unravel the entire structure.

A Replay of the Cisco Bubble?

The “invest in your customer so they can buy your product” model — dubbed “vendor financing” — draws direct parallels to Cisco’s strategy during the dot-com boom. Back then, Cisco extended loans, equity investments, or credit lines to telecom clients, who used the funds to purchase Cisco equipment.

When the internet bubble burst, many clients couldn’t sell their inventory or repay debts, leaving Cisco with massive bad loans and write-downs.

Rich Privorotsky, Head of Delta One Trading at Goldman Sachs, said:

“Vendor financing was a feature of that era and when when the telecom equipment makers (Cisco, Lucent, Nortel, etc.) extended loans, equity investments, or credit guarantees to their customers who then used the cash/credit to buy back the equipment… well suffice it to say, it did not end well for anyone.”

Meyer, a tech trader at JPMorgan, echoed that when a company pays its customers to buy its own products, it’s usually not a good sign.

The Australian Financial Review quipped:

“One firm invests $100bn in the other, so it can buy $100bn of chips made by the investor. Welcome to artificial intelligence’s circular economy.”

ZeroHedge called it “accounting magic” — not yet as catastrophic as the off-balance-sheet schemes that brought down Enron, but increasingly risky as attention grows.

“The more people notice, the closer we get to the tipping point.”

Still, Most See Strength in the Alliance

Despite concerns, most analysts remain bullish on the strategic value of these partnerships, citing:

  • AI’s continued rapid growth
  • High revenue visibility for Nvidia and Oracle
  • OpenAI’s still-dominant technological position

For Nvidia, securing OpenAI as a long-term anchor tenant locks in massive demand. OpenAI’s choice reinforces confidence in GPU-based AI, not the ASIC path championed by Broadcom.

Bank of America estimates that Nvidia’s $100 billion investment in OpenAI could generate $500 billion in future revenue for the chipmaker.

Disclaimer: For information purposes only. Past performance is not indicative of future results.
placeholder
Bitcoin Slides to $111K Ahead of PCE Inflation Data, Faces Monthly DeclineBitcoin experienced volatile trading on Friday, sliding close to $111,000 as investors awaited critical U.S.
Author  Mitrade
Aug 29, Fri
Bitcoin experienced volatile trading on Friday, sliding close to $111,000 as investors awaited critical U.S.
placeholder
Australia’s Trade Surplus Reaches 18-Month High in July Driven by Export GainsAustralia’s trade surplus expanded more than anticipated in July, primarily fueled by robust export activity as demand for commodities in key Asian and European markets showed slight recovery during the month.
Author  Mitrade
Sept 04, Thu
Australia’s trade surplus expanded more than anticipated in July, primarily fueled by robust export activity as demand for commodities in key Asian and European markets showed slight recovery during the month.
placeholder
ANZ Raises Gold Price Forecast to $3,800/Oz, Predicts Rally to Continue Through 2026Gold is expected to continue its upward momentum throughout 2025 and into early 2026, driven by ongoing geopolitical tensions, macroeconomic challenges, and market anticipation of U.S. monetary easing, according to analysts from ANZ in a research note released Wednesday.
Author  Mitrade
Sept 10, Wed
Gold is expected to continue its upward momentum throughout 2025 and into early 2026, driven by ongoing geopolitical tensions, macroeconomic challenges, and market anticipation of U.S. monetary easing, according to analysts from ANZ in a research note released Wednesday.
placeholder
Dollar Holds Steady Amid Inflation Data and Central Bank WatchThe U.S. dollar steadied in early Asian trading on Thursday following an unexpected 0.1% decline in the Producer Price Index (PPI) for final demand in August, as reported by the Labor Department’s Bureau of Labor Statistics.
Author  Mitrade
Sept 11, Thu
The U.S. dollar steadied in early Asian trading on Thursday following an unexpected 0.1% decline in the Producer Price Index (PPI) for final demand in August, as reported by the Labor Department’s Bureau of Labor Statistics.
placeholder
Asian Stocks Climb on US AI Optimism; Japan’s Nikkei Reaches New Record HighMost Asian stock markets climbed on Thursday, with China leading gains fueled by renewed optimism around U.S. artificial intelligence developments.
Author  Mitrade
Sept 11, Thu
Most Asian stock markets climbed on Thursday, with China leading gains fueled by renewed optimism around U.S. artificial intelligence developments.
goTop
quote