
On December 24, 2025, Nvidia and Groq announced a non-exclusive licensing agreement for Groq’s AI inference technology, per Groq’s official newsroom. Reports value the deal at $20 billion in cash, with Nvidia acquiring Groq’s assets but not the company itself, per CNBC. Groq founder Jonathan Ross and president Sunny Madra, along with key team members, will join Nvidia to advance the technology, while Groq remains independent under new CEO Simon Edwards, and GroqCloud continues operations, per Reuters.
Groq’s Language Processing Unit (LPU) excels in low-latency inference, claiming 10x faster and one-tenth the energy of traditional GPUs for LLM tasks, per TechCrunch. Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang plans to integrate Groq’s processors into the NVIDIA AI Factory architecture for broader real-time workloads, per an internal memo via CNBC. This strengthens Nvidia’s lead as AI shifts from training to inference, amid competition from Cerebras and AMD, per SiliconANGLE. Groq, valued at $6.9B in September 2025 after a $750M round, brings expertise from ex-Google TPU creators, per Bloomberg.
The deal, Nvidia’s largest ever (surpassing $7B Mellanox in 2019), reflects Big Tech’s acqui-hire trend to secure AI talent without full acquisitions, avoiding antitrust scrutiny, per Reuters. NVIDIA’s stock rose slightly, while Groq’s move solidifies inference innovation, per Yahoo Finance. No direct impact on Bitcoin or crypto prices, but enhanced AI infrastructure could boost blockchain applications, per. GroqCloud’s continuity ensures ongoing low-cost inference services.
This partnership accelerates AI inference at scale, potentially lowering costs for DeFi and NFT platforms. Investors should monitor Nvidia earnings and Groq integrations via nvidia.com news. The deal underscores Nvidia’s $4.6T dominance in AI chips, with $60.6B cash reserves fueling growth, per CNBC. Groq’s tech could enhance real-time AI for crypto trading bots and on-chain analytics.
