According to a report from Wccftech, it’s indicated that with soaring market demand, the shipment volume of NVIDIA’s Blackwell architecture GB200 AI servers has also significantly increased.
As NVIDIA claims, the Blackwell series is expected to be its most successful product. Industry sources cited by Wccftech indicate that NVIDIA’s latest GB200 AI servers are drawing significant orders, with strong demand projected to continue beyond 2025. This ongoing demand is enabling NVIDIA to secure additional orders as its newest AI products remain dominant.
The increasing demand for NVIDIA GB200 AI servers has led to revenue performances of Taiwanese suppliers such as Quanta, Foxconn, and Wistron exceeding expectations. Reportedly, NVIDIA is expected to ship 60,000 to 70,000 servers equipped with GB200 AI server. Each server is estimated to cost between USD 2 million and 3 million, resulting in approximately USD 210 billion in annual revenue from the Blackwell servers alone.
NVIDIA’s GB200 AI chip servers, available in NVL72 and NVL36 specifications, have seen greater preference for the less powerful models due to the growing number of AI startups choosing the more financially feasible NVL36 servers.
With Blackwell debuting in the market by Q4 2024, NVIDIA is projected to achieve significant revenue figures, potentially surpassing the performance of the previous Hopper architecture. Furthermore, NVIDIA has reportedly placed orders for around 340,000 CoWoS advanced packaging units with TSMC for 2025.
Notably, according to the industry sources previously cited in a report from Economic Daily News, TSMC is gearing up to start production of NVIDIA’s latest Blackwell platform architecture graphics processors (GPU) on the 4nm process.
The same report further cited sources, revealing that international giants such as Amazon, Dell, Google, Meta, and Microsoft will adopt the NVIDIA Blackwell architecture GPU for AI servers. As demand exceeds expectations,NVIDIA is prompted to increase its orders with TSMC by approximately 25%.
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(Photo credit: NVIDIA)