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VANCOUVER - Nvidia (NASDAQ:NVDA), a dominant force in the Semiconductors industry with a market capitalization of $4.46 trillion, announced Monday that its RTX PRO 6000 Blackwell Server Edition GPU will be integrated into standard 2U enterprise servers from major manufacturers, marking a significant expansion of GPU acceleration in traditional data centers. According to InvestingPro analysis, Nvidia is currently trading near its 52-week high, reflecting strong investor confidence in its market leadership.
Global system partners including Cisco, Dell Technologies, HPE, Lenovo and Supermicro will offer the 2U NVIDIA RTX PRO Servers in multiple configurations, according to a press release statement from the company. This expansion comes as Nvidia demonstrates remarkable financial performance, with revenue growth of 86% in the last twelve months. InvestingPro data reveals 20+ additional key insights about Nvidia’s market position and growth potential.
The new servers are designed to accelerate enterprise workloads including AI, content creation, data analytics, graphics, and scientific simulation. Nvidia claims these systems deliver up to 45x better performance and 18x higher energy efficiency compared to CPU-only 2U systems.
"AI is reinventing computing for the first time in 60 years — what started in the cloud is now transforming the architecture of on-premises data centers," said Jensen Huang, founder and CEO of Nvidia.
The 2U mainstream systems join previously announced RTX PRO Servers that support two, four or eight RTX PRO 6000 Blackwell GPUs. The new hardware incorporates fifth-generation Tensor Cores and second-generation Transformer Engine with FP4 precision support, which Nvidia states delivers up to 6x faster inference performance compared to previous-generation L40S GPUs.
Dell has announced updates to its AI Data Platform integrated with Nvidia’s reference design, along with PowerEdge R7725 2U servers featuring two RTX PRO 6000 GPUs.
The new servers are certified for Nvidia AI Enterprise software and can run AI reasoning models including Llama Nemotron Super, which the company claims delivers up to 3x price performance when running with NVFP4 on a single RTX PRO 6000 GPU compared to FP8 on H100 GPUs.
Customers can order RTX PRO Servers with eight RTX PRO 6000 GPUs in 4U form factors now. The 2U mainstream RTX PRO Servers are expected to be available later this year. With Nvidia’s excellent financial health score and strong market momentum, investors seeking detailed analysis can access comprehensive research reports and real-time metrics through InvestingPro, which covers over 1,400 top US stocks including Nvidia.
In other recent news, Nvidia has been at the center of various developments. Goldman Sachs reiterated its Buy rating on Nvidia stock, maintaining a $200 price target, as the company prepares for the deployment of its Blackwell architecture. Analyst James Schneider from Goldman Sachs noted key areas of focus, including the Blackwell ramp’s progress, the timing of China’s H20 chip ramp, and potential gross margin benefits from reserved H20 inventory. Meanwhile, two Chinese nationals were charged with the illegal export of Nvidia AI chips to China, including the H100 models, without the necessary U.S. Commerce Department licenses. This incident highlights ongoing tensions surrounding advanced technology exports. Additionally, retail investors have shifted their attention back to Nvidia, as noted by Charles Schwab’s Trading Activity Index, which reported Nvidia as a top buy in July. On another front, Huawei Technologies has announced plans to open-source its AI chip toolkit, intensifying its competition with Nvidia. These recent developments reflect the dynamic landscape in which Nvidia operates.
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