Nvidia is moving into the home turf of Intel and AMD

Nvidia ( NVDA ) has struck an expanded multi-year data center deal with Meta ( META ) that will see the chip maker supply the social media giant with millions of Blackwell and Rubin GPUs.

And while that was certainly the most exciting part of Tuesday’s news, the companies said the deal will see Meta roll out processor-only Nvidia Grace servers in its data centers, the first large-scale deployment of the chips.

Grace is the processor that Nvidia pairs with two Blackwell or two Blackwell Ultra GPUs to form its GB200 and GB300 AI superchips.

The Grace-only servers come at a time when Nvidia is looking to capitalize on growing demand for traditional processors, as hyperscalers increasingly look to the chips to help power inference AI and agentic AI applications.

Nvidia founder and CEO Jensen Huang speaks during Nvidia Live at CES 2026 ahead of the annual Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas on January 5, 2026. (Patrick T. Fallon/AFP via Getty Images) · PATRICK T. FALLON via Getty Images

That spells trouble for Intel ( INTC ), which has long dominated the data center CPU space, and Advanced Micro Devices ( AMD ), which is working to take market share from Intel.

“Nvidia has been on a path to deliver more content in the data center for a while,” Gil Luria, managing director and chief technology officer at DA Davidson, told Yahoo Finance.

“The addition of Mellanox [a networking company Nvidia acquired in 2020] put them in the networking category as well,” he said. “So when they’re selling into the data center, they’re actually selling almost a large majority of the value. But it makes sense for them to further increase that value by adding processor capacity.”

Nvidia’s move couldn’t come at a worse time for Intel, which is facing capacity constraints that prevent it from producing enough processors to meet demand from data center builders.

It’s not just data centers though. Nvidia is also reportedly moving into Intel and AMD’s consumer business with its own laptop chip, creating a whole new headache for PC fans.

Nvidia’s move to sell processors doesn’t mean it’s giving up its massive GPU market lead. Nor is it a sign that the AI ​​GPU market is on its last legs. Rather, it’s about capitalizing on a growing trend in the AI ​​industry to use processors to power smaller AI models.

Giant AI models like the latest and greatest frontier models from OpenAI (OPAI.PVT), Google (GOOG, GOOGL) and Anthropic (ANTH.PVT) will still need the kind of horsepower that only a GPU can provide. But the processors steal back a bit of the spotlight from those smaller models.

The processors are also a bottleneck for the AI ​​supply chain, one of many choke points in the ongoing development of AI that could hurt Nvidia’s sales over time. By bringing its own processors to the table, Luria said, Nvidia is doing everything it can to maintain sales.

But Nvidia isn’t the only processor alternative in town. Like GPUs, hyperscalers like Amazon ( AMZN ), Google, and Microsoft ( MSFT ) are building their own processors. Amazon has its Graviton chip, while Google has its Axion processor. Microsoft, meanwhile, has its Cobalt processors.

Like Nvidia, the cloud providers use Arm’s chip architecture rather than the x86 architecture that Intel and AMD use, which could benefit Arm in the long run.

Meanwhile, Intel reported during its most recent earnings call that it can’t meet CPU demand.

“They didn’t have the capacity,” said Bernstein analyst Stacy Rasgon. “They should have been very well positioned, because they actually did [chip plants]. But they were selling equipment for pennies on the dollar two quarters ago, so they missed it completely.”

It’s not all doom and gloom for Intel. While Nvidia now competes with the company, it also collaborates with Intel to produce special servers that combine Nvidia GPUs with Intel processors.

For all the chatter in the data center, it’s not the only place Nvidia is looking to play in the CPU space. For years, Nvidia has been rumored to be preparing its own processors for consumer laptops, and it’s looking more and more like that’s about to become a reality.

According to The Verge, online leaks show that Lenovo is building six laptops with Nvidia chips. Called N1 and N1X, the processors would open up a new market for the company, though it would be far less profitable than the data center business, which brought in $51.2 billion in the third quarter alone.

Nvidia is already a mainstay in the gaming space thanks to its powerful graphics cards, but a laptop running the company’s own processor could be a hit with gamers, a group that is generally more willing to spend big on high-powered PCs.

Nvidia’s processor gamble is just getting started, but with its massive success in the GPU market, the company could prove to be a formidable new foe for Intel and AMD.

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Email Daniel Howley at dhowley@yahoofinance.com. Follow him on Twitter at @DanielHowley.

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