The narrative surrounding Nvidia is no longer solely about selling chips to hyperscalers. A pair of developments this week — a credit upgrade from S&P Global and a stunning acceleration in sovereign AI revenue — point to a company that is successfully recasting itself as a partner to national governments while locking down its financial credibility.
S&P Global lifted Nvidia’s long-term credit rating to AA, citing an “insatiable” appetite for artificial intelligence chips. The agency projects revenue of $394 billion in fiscal 2027, climbing to $544 billion the following year, with free cash flow swelling to $276 billion by 2028. The only weak spot flagged: heavy reliance on contract manufacturer TSMC in Taiwan.
That rating upgrade arrives just as a different part of Nvidia’s business — one barely acknowledged a year ago — is reshaping the revenue base. The sovereign AI segment, which sells infrastructure enabling countries to build and control their own AI capabilities, generated $30 billion in the fiscal year 2026. That is more than triple the prior year’s figure, a jump of over 80% year-on-year that came from nearly 40 countries, including Canada, France, the Netherlands, Singapore and the UK. The economies these countries represent collectively account for roughly $50 trillion in global GDP. Nvidia’s finance chief expects the segment to grow at least in line with the GDP of each country, meaning the trajectory is structural, not cyclical.
This pivot to sovereign clients fills a void left by Washington’s tightening of export controls. In the most recent quarter, Nvidia shipped no Data Center Hopper products to China — a market that previously contributed $4.6 billion. The US Commerce Department closed a loophole that might have allowed advanced Blackwell chips to reach Chinese companies via foreign subsidiaries; now all entities with headquarters or parent companies in China require an export license. Losing one of the world’s largest single markets could have crushed the stock. Instead, Nvidia has gained 41% over the past twelve months. The void is being filled — and then some — by governments.
To navigate the regulatory maze, Nvidia has brought in heavy artillery. Bruce Andrews, a former Intel chief lobbyist and deputy US commerce secretary, joins as chief external affairs officer. His immediate challenges include securing approval for H200 chip shipments currently pending for about ten Chinese firms and obtaining export licenses for the upcoming Vera CPU series. The appointment signals that Nvidia intends to play offense in Washington, not just defense.
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On the infrastructure side, the company is co-founding a $10 billion joint venture called Helix Digital Infrastructure alongside private-equity firm KKR, the Kuwait sovereign wealth fund, and energy provider Vistra. The project, led by former AWS chief Adam Selipsky, aims to build massive data centers designed to handle the enormous electricity demands of AI workloads. Nvidia will supply its DSX platform, which it says dramatically improves energy efficiency.
At the market level, the stock is taking a breather. Trading at €177.98 (with a slight daily gain) and up roughly 10% year-to-date, Nvidia’s share price sits just 9% above its 200-day moving average while remaining nearly 13% below the May high of €202.50. The 30-day decline of about 8% reflects lingering uncertainty over export controls and the China shutdown. With annualized volatility of nearly 42%, the ride is far from smooth. Yet the consensus analyst target of €258.74 implies upside of more than 46% from current levels.
Investors will get their next strategic update at the virtual annual general meeting on June 24, where management is set to unveil the Vera Rubin AI platform and discuss an expanded capital return program — a $0.25 quarterly dividend and $80 billion in share buybacks.
What emerges from these moving pieces is a company that is no longer hostage to any single geography or customer archetype. Regulators tighten the screws on one front; sovereign states open another. The credit rating agency rewards the resilience. The market is pausing, but the underlying trend is unmistakable: Nvidia is turning geopolitical fragmentation into a customer acquisition engine.
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