Nvidia (NVDA) stock dropped nearly 17% Monday, leading a sell-off across chip stocks and the broader market after a new AI model from China’s DeepSeek raised questions about AI investment and the rise of more cost-efficient artificial intelligence agents.
Nvidia’s decline shaved $589 billion off the AI chipmaker’s market cap, the largest single-day loss in stock market history.
Chinese startup DeepSeek released a new AI model on Jan. 20 viewed as a threat to OpenAI. American venture capitalist Marc Andreessen called the model “one of the most amazing and impressive breakthroughs I’ve ever seen.”
The news came just a month after DeepSeek said one of its latest AI models cost just $5.6 million to train. OpenAI’s GPT-4 model cost more than $100 million to train.
The announcements spurred fears that AI models may begin to require fewer chips and energy than they currently use. Nvidia has become the world’s largest company on the back of exploding demand for its high-end chips that help train and use AI models.
“If DeepSeek’s innovations are adopted broadly, an argument can be made that model training costs could come down significantly even at U.S. hyperscalers, potentially raising questions about the need for 1-million XPU/GPU clusters as projected by some,” wrote Raymond James semiconductor analyst Srini Pajjuri in a note to investors Sunday evening.
Chip stocks also dropped across the board premarket Monday, with Broadcom (AVGO) down over 17%, Micron (MU) off almost 12%, and Advanced Micro Devices (AMD) down more than 6%.
However, Pajjuri continued, “A more logical implication is that DeepSeek will drive even more urgency among U.S. hyperscalers to leverage their key advantage (access to GPUs) to distance themselves from cheaper alternatives.”
Bernstein analyst Stacy Rasgon also called into question the $5.6 million training cost for DeepSeek’s model, which “does not include all the other costs associated with prior research and experiments on architectures, algorithms, or data.”
Rasgon believes DeepSeek’s announcement was “not really worthy of the hysteria that has taken over the Twitterverse over the last several days.”
Nvidia itself didn’t seem too worried about the DeepSeek buzz, calling R1 “an excellent AI advancement” in a statement.
Tightened US export restrictions announced in former President Joe Biden’s final days in office could also add a threat to DeepSeek’s ability to continue training new models.
The new rules limit China’s ability to buy Nvidia’s AI chips through resellers and access chips in remote data centers. And China is restricted from importing the most advanced chipmaking machines required to make artificial intelligence semiconductors from the Dutch firm ASML (ASML).