The world’s most valuable company, Nvidia, expects to double revenue to US$1 billion (A$1.41 trillion) by 2027.
The bold forecast was made by Chief Executive Officer Jensen Hang at the company’s GTC (GPU Technology Conference) event on Monday (Tuesday AEDT), according to media coverage.
“Between 2025 and 2027, Nvidia’s artificial intelligence hardware is projected to generate $1 trillion in revenue,” he was quoted in a Barrons article as saying in his keynote address.
Huang did not provide details on the prediction, which represents a significant increase in the revenue opportunity of about $500 billion that the giant computer chip maker had talked about on its last earnings call in November 2025.
It represents the sales of its Blackwell and Rubin graphic processing units (GPUs), which are used for training the large language models used for artificial intelligence (AI).
Providing this number so publicly shows Nvidia, which is at the centre of the explosion in AI computing, expects to fight off growing competition to remain the biggest player in the market for AI chips.
Huang was also expected to detail how the company planned to adapt to the dynamic AI landscape, according to Reuters.
He started the keynote address by arguing Nvidia's competitive advantage included its CUDA (Compute Unified Device Architecture) chip programming software, which some analysts regard as its strongest shield.
"The installed base is what attracts developers who then create (the) new algorithms that achieve the breakthrough" technologies, Huang was quoted as saying in this Reuters article.
"We are in every cloud. We're in every computer company. We serve just about every single industry."
Nvidia shares (NASDAQ: NVDA) closed $2.94 (1.63%) higher at $183.19, capitalising the company at $4.45 trillion, before easing to $182.52 in after-hours trading.
The company’s GPUs are a key part of the data centres that are at the heart of AI models and applications.



