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Nvidia Adds Intel, Synopsys, Nokia and Exits Arm Holdings in Q4

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TLDR

  • Nvidia made over $8 billion in new stock investments in Q4 2025
  • Intel is now Nvidia’s largest holding at 60% of its portfolio after a $5 billion buy
  • Nvidia took new positions in chip-design firm Synopsys and networking company Nokia
  • Nvidia fully exited Arm Holdings after a failed takeover attempt
  • CoreWeave stayed in the portfolio but shrank from 86% to 13% of total weight

Nvidia’s investment portfolio went through a major overhaul in the fourth quarter of 2025. The chipmaker added three new positions and exited four others, according to its latest 13F filing with the SEC.

The filing covers holdings as of December 31, 2025, and was disclosed in February 2026. Nvidia’s stock is up 1.78% year to date.

Intel Takes the Top Spot

The biggest move was a 214.8 million-share stake in Intel, worth $5 billion at $23.28 per share. Intel now makes up 60.48% of Nvidia’s total disclosed portfolio.


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Intel Corporation, INTC

Nvidia first announced the Intel investment in September 2025 as part of a product partnership. The two companies plan to develop custom data center and personal computing products together.

Under the deal, Nvidia will use Intel’s CPU technology and x86 ecosystem inside its AI platforms. The partnership also gives Nvidia access to U.S.-based chip manufacturing.

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Intel’s stock has climbed more than 44% since Nvidia announced the investment.

New Bets on Synopsys and Nokia

Nvidia’s second-largest new position is in Synopsys, a chip-design software company. Nvidia bought 4.8 million shares in December 2025 at $414.79 each, spending around $2 billion.

Synopsys provides electronic design automation software used to build semiconductors. Its stock dropped sharply in September 2025 after it reported weak earnings.

HSBC recently downgraded Synopsys to “hold” and cut its price target from $545 to $455. The bank pointed to limited near-term growth and pressure on its core business lines heading into 2026.

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Nvidia also invested roughly $1 billion in Nokia. The Finnish company now supplies networking equipment to data centers and cloud providers, a long way from its mobile phone roots.

Nokia makes up 8.21% of Nvidia’s portfolio, its fourth-largest holding. Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang described the telecom sector as “critical national infrastructure” when the investment was announced in October 2025.

Arm Is Out, CoreWeave Holds Steady

Nvidia fully exited its stake in Arm Holdings during Q4 2025. Nvidia had previously attempted to acquire Arm but was blocked by regulators.

CoreWeave, the cloud computing company, stayed in the portfolio with 24.2 million shares unchanged. However, its weight dropped from 86.44% in Q3 to just 13.27% in Q4 after the large Intel purchase.

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CoreWeave stock is up 129% since its March 2025 IPO. Nvidia first bought in before the company went public.

Nvidia also sold its full positions in Applied Digital, Recursion Pharmaceuticals, and WeRide. A small stake in Yandex remains unchanged.

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Crypto World

Tally to Wind Down DAO Platform, Scraps Planned ICO

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Tally to Wind Down DAO Platform, Scraps Planned ICO

Decentralized autonomous organization (DAO) governance platform Tally is shutting down after five years of operations, citing a lack of sustainable business models for governance tooling in the crypto market. 

Tally co-founder and CEO Dennison Bertram said the company will begin winding down at the end of March. He added that the company is not moving forward with a planned initial coin offering (ICO), concluding that it could not confidently deliver on the expectations that would come with selling tokens to investors. 

Tally’s closure comes despite years of activity on its platform, which supported governance for hundreds of organizations and processed more than $1 billion in payments, according to Bertram. At its peak, the company said it helped secure up to $80 billion in value and served more than 1 million users.

Tally launched in 2021 as a software platform for on-chain organizations. According to startup intelligence platform Tracxn, the company raised a total of $15.5 million across three funding rounds. 

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Related: Vitalik Buterin proposes using AI to strengthen DAO governance

The shutdown reflects the challenges facing DAO-focused platforms after years of development and adoption. It highlights the pace of change in the industry, where even substantial achievements may prove insufficient to support a venture-backed business in DAO governance tooling.

Source: Tally

Industry reflects on DAO challenges amid Tally shutdown

Following the announcement, builders and operators across the ecosystem pointed to a broader reassessment of DAO governance, with some describing Tally’s closure as part of a wider shift in how coordination tools are being developed and monetized. 

Oku Trade CEO Getty Hill said DAO development has not met the expectations set during earlier growth phases.

Related: DAOs may need to ditch decentralization to court institutions

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“While stablecoins have achieved the greatest product-market fit in crypto, I still believe DAOs will ultimately get there, though maybe not for another 3-10 years,” he wrote. 

Meanwhile, Oasis Onchain founder Stefen Deleveaux described the shutdown as “the end of an era,” reflecting on a wave of early DAO tooling projects that emerged during the 2020–2021 cycle but struggled to sustain themselves over time.

Realms DAO chief technology officer Adrian Brzeziński pointed to the stats highlighted by Bertram, saying that the “hardest truth” in crypto infrastructure is that usage does not equate to revenue. “The next wave of governance won’t look like voting portals. It’ll look like capital coordination,” Brzeziński wrote. 

DAOs are “difficult” to operate

On March 11, Aave founder Stani Kulechov said DAOs, in their current form, are “extraordinarily difficult” to operate. He pointed to internal conflicts and proposals that can take weeks of forum posts, temperature checks and multiple votes to pass. 

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