Nvidia’s push into physical AI sparks rally in Asian partners

Nvidia’s push into physical AI sparks rally in Asian partners


The company has deepened chip-focused ties with suppliers such as SK Hynix and Samsung Electronics

Published Sun, May 3, 2026 · 12:17 PM

[SINGAPORE] The list of Asian stocks that benefit from business partnership with Nvidia is getting longer, as the region further integrates into the artificial intelligence chip giant’s business ecosystem.

Just in the past week, South Korea’s LG Electronics, Taiwan’s Nanya Technology, as well as China’s Huizhou Desay SV Automotive and Pateo Connect Technology Shanghai have become the latest to rally on news of tie-ups, supply-chain participation or product collaboration with the US chip designer.

Investor enthusiasm about these firms, some of which are relatively obscure outside the industry or domestic markets, is a reminder of how Nvidia-induced demand is shaping stock performance across Asia’s technology supply chain.

Asian suppliers now account for about 90 per cent of Nvidia’s production costs, up from roughly 65 per cent last year, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The explosive growth of the chip designer’s products has intensified its reliance on Asian partners that dominate manufacturing, assembly and key components.

“It’s inevitable that global tech companies like Nvidia will continue to ramp up their reliance on Asia supply chain,” said Ling Vey-Sern, managing director at Union Bancaire Privee. Physical AI “can add on top of the already burgeoning demand from Asia’s supply chains for AI chips”, he added.

Nvidia has expanded its roster of Asian partners in recent years, primarily through deeper chip-focused ties with suppliers such as SK Hynix and Samsung Electronics. While those partnerships concentrated on scaling AI computing power, the latest wave of collaborations in the region pointed to a shift beyond semiconductors into physical AI, including robotics.

Navigate Asia in
a new global order

Get the insights delivered to your inbox.

Shares of LG Electronics jumped as much as 15 per cent on Tuesday (Apr 28), their biggest intraday gain since Feb 11, following a domestic media report that the firm and Nvidia will discuss a plan to integrate its home robot with the US chip designer’s platform.

In Taiwan, Nanya Technology’s shares surged 10 per cent after a local news report on the chipmaker’s collaboration with Nvidia.

Elsewhere, China’s Huizhou Desay also saw its stock rally after unveiling a new mass‑production intelligent driving solution with Nvidia, while automobile product maker Pateo Connect Technology’s shares soared after the company entered a series of collaborations with Nvidia.

A LG Electronics spokesperson said the company can confirm that it recently met with Nvidia, adding that the two companies are exploring strategic collaboration in physical AI, including the robotics ecosystem.

A representative for Samsung Electronics declined to comment in response to Bloomberg’s queries. Nanya said in an e-mailed response that it doesn’t comment on customer-related information.

Broadening demand

Nvidia’s push into physical AI – spanning robotics, autonomous systems and AI-enabled manufacturing – extends its influence beyond chips into real-world deployment, positioning Asia as a critical partner in that expansion. CEO Jensen Huang has framed physical AI as the next wave after generative AI.

“Increasing and broadening demand is creating opportunities across industries for more tech suppliers to join the supply chain as AI buildout continues globally,” said Marvin Chen, a strategist at Bloomberg Intelligence. “It means that tech heavy north Asian markets may continue to outperform.”

The latest capital expenditure guidance from US tech giants shows AI spending is accelerating, with Amazon.com, Microsoft and Alphabet each committing roughly US$190 billion to US$200 billion for this year and Meta Platforms raising its outlays to as much as US$145 billion.

Nvidia accounts for about half of Microsoft’s capital expenditure and roughly a quarter of Amazon’s, with a smaller but still leading share at Meta and Alphabet, based on calculations of data compiled by Bloomberg. 

Meanwhile, Hon Hai is a consistent secondary beneficiary, particularly at Microsoft and Amazon, while SK Hynix takes a mid-single-digit share across companies.

Surging demand has shown up in the results of those suppliers. Samsung’s semiconductor arm beat expectations last week with a 48-fold jump in profit. A few days earlier, SK Hynix reported a five-fold increase in quarterly earnings. 

“Asia’s technology base is a structurally important advantage, particularly as AI creates new demand across semiconductors, components, servers and broader hardware infrastructure,” said Rajeev De Mello, a portfolio manager at Gama Asset Management.

“Asia has already developed significant experience and supply chains to build advanced semiconductors and robots, which is a strong base for implementing physical AI.” BLOOMBERG

Decoding Asia newsletter: your guide to navigating Asia in a new global order. Sign up here to get Decoding Asia newsletter. Delivered to your inbox. Free.



Source link

Posted in

Liam Redmond

As an editor at Forbes Washington DC, I specialize in exploring business innovations and entrepreneurial success stories. My passion lies in delivering impactful content that resonates with readers and sparks meaningful conversations.

Leave a Comment