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Nvidia inks order for 16,000 AI GPUs worth $500 million — Indian data center company seeks to own 32,000 Nvidia H100 and GH200 GPUs by 2025

Daniel Nenni

Admin
Staff member
India is an essential market for Nvidia now that U.S. export restrictions block off China.

Nvidia GH200 SC23 Announcement

(Image credit: Nvidia)

According to a report from Reuters, Yotta, a data center and server company based in India, is set to buy 16,000 Nvidia GPUs worth $500 million by March 2025. This deal is coming soon after U.S. sanctions banned the export of many of Nvidia's top-end GPUs to China, and it seems India is at least partially filling the void where Chinese demand used to be.

Reuters talked to Yotta CEO Sunil Gupta, who said the company would order 16,000 H100 and GH200 GPUs by March 2025. These GPUs are estimated to be worth around $500 million altogether, though it's unclear how many Yotta is ordering. In 2022, the price of one H100 GPU was over $30,000, but rough math implies $500 million would be enough to buy several thousand H100 chips in addition to GH200, which is presumably significantly more expensive. Yotta may be getting a better deal from Nvidia, and perhaps the order doesn't include many GH200s.

Before this latest purchase, the company also bought another 16,000 H100 GPUs last year, and they're due for delivery this July. This deal was worth about $500 million, as Gupta claimed its order for H100 and GH200 would bring the total cost of Yotta's AI GPU purchases to $1 billion. The fact that Yotta can purchase higher-end hardware without significantly increasing its budget implies that perhaps H100 isn't as expensive as it used to be. This may be the case, considering that H200 has since succeeded H100.

The report links this Yotta-Nvidia deal to the latest U.S. sanctions on China, which have banned the export of many high-end GPUs to the country. Nvidia wasn't allowed to sell its H100 GPUs in China, so it made a slower version of H800 to comply with the sanctions. Months later, however, H800 was banned from China, meaning Nvidia had to create more variants of its GPUs that it could sell in China.

Although the U.S. government seems to be finally easing up on increasing the strictness of its sanctions, it's uncertain whether more rules will be put in place, and uncertainty isn't conducive to business. This may be why India is a more appealing place to strike AI GPU deals because even though it's not an ally of the U.S., India is unlikely to become the next target for sanctions soon.

 
India is the next China only without the communist stuff. I hope the semiconductor industry invests accordingly.
 
India is an essential market for Nvidia now that U.S. export restrictions block off China.

Nvidia GH200 SC23 Announcement

(Image credit: Nvidia)

According to a report from Reuters, Yotta, a data center and server company based in India, is set to buy 16,000 Nvidia GPUs worth $500 million by March 2025. This deal is coming soon after U.S. sanctions banned the export of many of Nvidia's top-end GPUs to China, and it seems India is at least partially filling the void where Chinese demand used to be.

Reuters talked to Yotta CEO Sunil Gupta, who said the company would order 16,000 H100 and GH200 GPUs by March 2025. These GPUs are estimated to be worth around $500 million altogether, though it's unclear how many Yotta is ordering. In 2022, the price of one H100 GPU was over $30,000, but rough math implies $500 million would be enough to buy several thousand H100 chips in addition to GH200, which is presumably significantly more expensive. Yotta may be getting a better deal from Nvidia, and perhaps the order doesn't include many GH200s.

Before this latest purchase, the company also bought another 16,000 H100 GPUs last year, and they're due for delivery this July. This deal was worth about $500 million, as Gupta claimed its order for H100 and GH200 would bring the total cost of Yotta's AI GPU purchases to $1 billion. The fact that Yotta can purchase higher-end hardware without significantly increasing its budget implies that perhaps H100 isn't as expensive as it used to be. This may be the case, considering that H200 has since succeeded H100.

The report links this Yotta-Nvidia deal to the latest U.S. sanctions on China, which have banned the export of many high-end GPUs to the country. Nvidia wasn't allowed to sell its H100 GPUs in China, so it made a slower version of H800 to comply with the sanctions. Months later, however, H800 was banned from China, meaning Nvidia had to create more variants of its GPUs that it could sell in China.

Although the U.S. government seems to be finally easing up on increasing the strictness of its sanctions, it's uncertain whether more rules will be put in place, and uncertainty isn't conducive to business. This may be why India is a more appealing place to strike AI GPU deals because even though it's not an ally of the U.S., India is unlikely to become the next target for sanctions soon.


"This may be why India is a more appealing place to strike AI GPU deals because even though it's not an ally of the U.S., India is unlikely to become the next target for sanctions soon.

I'm not sure if this article's author really knows what he is talking about. The following statement is posted on the US State Department website:

"The relationship between the United States and India is one of the most strategic and consequential of the 21st century. The United States supports India’s emergence as a leading global power and a vital partner in promoting a peaceful, stable, and prosperous Indo-Pacific region. The 2+2 Ministerial Dialogue between the U.S. Secretaries of State and Defense and their Indian counterparts is the premier recurring dialogue mechanism between the United States and India. Through the 2+2 mechanism, U.S. and Indian officials advance a wide range of initiatives across the breadth of the United States-India partnership."


 
"This may be why India is a more appealing place to strike AI GPU deals because even though it's not an ally of the U.S., India is unlikely to become the next target for sanctions soon.

I'm not sure if this article's author really knows what he is talking about. The following statement is posted on the US State Department website:

"The relationship between the United States and India is one of the most strategic and consequential of the 21st century. The United States supports India’s emergence as a leading global power and a vital partner in promoting a peaceful, stable, and prosperous Indo-Pacific region. The 2+2 Ministerial Dialogue between the U.S. Secretaries of State and Defense and their Indian counterparts is the premier recurring dialogue mechanism between the United States and India. Through the 2+2 mechanism, U.S. and Indian officials advance a wide range of initiatives across the breadth of the United States-India partnership."


US was saying the same stuff about China in the 90s, Japan in the 70s, Europe in the 50s. As soon as they develop enough to assert their own interests and their labor becomes too expensive for western corporations, US will turn on them like clockwork.
 
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