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Jensen Huang of Nvidia
(Patrick T. Fallon/Getty Images)

Marvell spikes after Nvidia invests $2 billion in the custom chip maker

And YOU get $2 billion and YOU get $2 billion.

Luke Kawa

Shares of Marvell Technology are spiking in premarket trading after Nvidia announced that its investing $2 billion in the custom chip company as part of another strategic partnership.

The pact will see Marvell “provide custom XPUs and NVLink Fusion-compatible scale-up networking,” a major step for Nvidia in demonstrating the willingness and the ability of its AI offerings to be deployed in concert with other companies products. In essence, Nvidia is ready for a world where data centers are composed of a mix of its GPUs as well as custom chips. Making sure those custom chips integrate well with its AI infrastructure platform will help maximize the dollars it receives for every gigawatt of data center capacity deployed.

And for Marvell, it’s a big vote of confidence in its custom chip and networking business.

This alliance builds on Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang’s keynote address at the GPU Technology Conference this month, where he repeatedly stressed that the chip designer is both vertically integrated (that is, offers all the solutions you need, not just GPUs) and also horizontally open (read: willing to integrate its offerings into whatever your technology stack happens to be).

Other parts of the AI ecosystem are catching a bid on this news, like data center companies Nebius, CoreWeave, Cipher Digital, Applied Digital, and IREN, as well as optical communications upstart POET Technologies.

The chip designer’s most recent strategic investment was in neocloud Nebius, also for $2 billion.

In addition, Nvidia recently invested (you guessed it!) $2 billion apiece in advanced optics companies Coherent and Lumentum as part of deals that included purchase commitments (unlike this partnership with Marvell).

However, Marvell and Nvidia will also be collaborating on silicon photonics technology, according to the press release.

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Saleah Blancaflor

US national average gas price rises after a short-lived dip, hitting $4.53

After nearly a week of declines, the national average price for a gallon of regular gas is rising again with Memorial Day less than two weeks away.

Today, the price sits around $4.53, which is a couple of cents lower than last week. But with crude oil prices floating around the $100 per barrel range, gas prices remain around their highest levels since 2022.

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(Event contracts are offered through Robinhood Derivatives, LLC — probabilities referenced or sourced from KalshiEx LLC or ForecastEx LLC.)

The uptick comes as we get closer to Memorial Day weekend, with many drivers preparing to hit the road facing the highest price at the pump during the summer holiday in four years. GasBuddy’s Patrick De Haan told Sherwood News last month that gas could potentially hit $5 by then.

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(Event contracts are offered through Robinhood Derivatives, LLC — probabilities referenced or sourced from KalshiEx LLC or ForecastEx LLC.)

The uptick comes as we get closer to Memorial Day weekend, with many drivers preparing to hit the road facing the highest price at the pump during the summer holiday in four years. GasBuddy’s Patrick De Haan told Sherwood News last month that gas could potentially hit $5 by then.

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Boeing drops as Trump tells Fox News that China will order 200 jets, well below the 500-plane expectation

Boeing is on pace for one of its worst trading days of 2026, following President Trump’s announcement that China will place a 200-plane order from the company — the country’s first major Boeing order since 2017.

Since last year, reports of the deal’s size have placed the order number at “up to 500.”

Trump disclosed the order details in an interview on Fox News, saying “Boeing wanted 150, they got 200.”

markets

Ford has added $10 billion of market cap in 2 days on bullish trading around its energy business

Ford shares are having another banner day. The stock is up 7% intraday Thursday, after closing up more than 13% on Wednesday (the company’s best trading day since March 2020). The activity has added about $10 billion to Ford’s market cap since Tuesday’s close, according to Bloomberg data.

About 268,000 call options have changed hands as of 10:50 a.m. ET on Wednesday, roughly 3x the 20-day average for a full session.

Optimism around Ford Energy, the company’s new energy business, appears to still be driving the price action. The company will sell US-assembled battery systems to “utilities, data centers, and large industrial and commercial customers in the United States” and is licensing tech from Chinese battery giant CATL.

In a Tuesday evening note, Morgan Stanley analysts said Ford Energy could be worth $10 billion. Analyst Andrew Percoco said there is a “fairly high likelihood” Ford signs a supply agreement with a large commercial customer, and potentially hyperscalers, in the next few months.

Ford’s new subsidiary is similar to Tesla’s energy storage business and will add revenue through both sales (of its large 20-foot battery container systems) and service. Detroit rival GM is doing something similar and retooled its Tennessee EV battery plant to make energy storage batteries.

Optimism around Ford Energy, the company’s new energy business, appears to still be driving the price action. The company will sell US-assembled battery systems to “utilities, data centers, and large industrial and commercial customers in the United States” and is licensing tech from Chinese battery giant CATL.

In a Tuesday evening note, Morgan Stanley analysts said Ford Energy could be worth $10 billion. Analyst Andrew Percoco said there is a “fairly high likelihood” Ford signs a supply agreement with a large commercial customer, and potentially hyperscalers, in the next few months.

Ford’s new subsidiary is similar to Tesla’s energy storage business and will add revenue through both sales (of its large 20-foot battery container systems) and service. Detroit rival GM is doing something similar and retooled its Tennessee EV battery plant to make energy storage batteries.

markets

Fermi jumps as management touts increased interest in its data center project

Fermi, a Texas-based energy and AI infrastructure company, reported a net loss of $189 million in Q1 as it heavily accelerated capital investments.

During the conference call, co-President Anna Bofa offered some encouraging news, saying that the firm has “hosted multiple prospective tenants and strategic partners” at its Project Matador data-center site, sending shares sharply higher.

Fermi funneled $441 million into property, plant, and equipment in Q1, bringing its gross balance to approximately $1.4 billion.

Its big investment push coincided with the substantial expansion of Project Matador at its development site in Texas. The company officially secured over 2 gigawatts of power generation capacity across its owned and contracted assets.

The company plans to have secured a tenant for this location and delivered power to it within the next 90 days. It’s poised to be a busy quarter for Fermi: another goal during this span includes hiring its next CEO.

To continue supporting the build-out plans, Fermi closed $785 million in new equipment finance facilities this quarter, anchored by a $500 million facility from MUFG. Fermi also received a $156 million financing commitment secured with Yorkville.

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