NVIDIA (NASDAQ:NVDA) is seeing robust demand for its Hopper and Blackwell GPUs, according to a note from Morgan Stanley. the bank reported that Nvidia’s Blackwell chips have entered volume production, driven by significant interest from major customers, presenting strong growth potential for the company. As a result, the company’s shares gained more than 4% intra-day on Tuesday.
Oracle recently announced plans to construct a Zettascale AI supercluster using 131,000 Nvidia Blackwell GPUs, delivering 2.4 ZettaFLOPS of AI performance. This move has further boosted Nvidia’s outlook and positively impacted its semiconductor suppliers.
At a recent event, Oracle reportedly requested additional GPU supply, signaling optimism for the Asia-based AI semiconductor supply chain. Morgan Stanley now projects that TSMC’s CoWoS (Chip-on-Wafer-on-Substrate) capacity will increase to 80,000-90,000 wafers per month by 2025, up from earlier estimates of 70,000.
In the near term, demand for Nvidia’s Hopper H200 GPUs remains strong, especially among smaller cloud service providers and sovereign AI projects, easing concerns about inventory buildup. Morgan Stanley estimates that 450,000 Blackwell chips will be produced in the fourth quarter of 2024, creating a potential revenue opportunity exceeding $10 billion for Nvidia.
The bank also noted that while Nvidia is addressing some technical challenges with its GB200 server racks, these issues are typical for new product launches and are being resolved as part of the standard debugging process.