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Money, money, money, in Nvidia’s world

Nvidia President and CEO Jensen Huang speaks to the media as he arrives for a meeting with the Senate Banking Committee on Capitol Hill on December 3, 2025 in Washington, DC.

Anna Moneymaker | Getty Images

A 2025 refrain many of us likely have heard would be: “You’re buying that? You’re doing that? In this economy?”

But this problem does not seem to extend to the world’s most valuable company, Nvidia, which is sitting on a problem most of us would like to have: having too much cash.

At the end of October, Nvidia had $60.6 billion in cash and short-term investments. That’s up from $13.3 billion in January 2023, just after OpenAI released ChatGPT.

And this is even after splashing out billions of dollars on stakes in companies: $1 billion for Nokia, $5 billion for Intel, $10 billion for Anthropic—and a jaw-dropping $100 billion commitment to OpenAI still under discussion.

To add to this, Nvidia announced it would invest $2 billion in Synopsys this week.

Nvidia, which has gone from a niche maker of graphic cards to the world’s most valuable company, has also made $37 billion in buybacks and dividends, with a further $60 billion authorized.

When your biggest challenge is figuring out how to spend $60 billion, you’re living the ultimate corporate luxury.

To take a line from ABBA: “Money money money, must be funny, in Nvidia’s world.”

What you need to know today

And finally…

BEIJING, CHINA – DECEMBER 3: French President Emmanuel Macron (R) and Chinese President Xi Jinping walk during a state visit at the Great Hall of the People on December 3, 2025 in Beijing, China.

Adek Berry-Pool | Getty Images News | Getty Images

Ukraine, trade, pandas: What China’s Xi and France’s Macron discussed in Beijing

China said it was open to importing more goods from France in exchange for a “fair, conducive environment” for Chinese businesses in the European nation, President Xi Jinping told his counterpart Emmanuel Macron on Thursday as they met in Beijing.

The French president kicked off a 3-day visit to China on Wednesday — his first trip to Beijing in more than two years — on the heels of growing frictions over a range of topics including trade imbalance and the long-running war in Ukraine.

In a separate readout from the French government, Macron told Xi that the two countries must work together based on “a balanced relationship,” while urging Beijing to help end the Russia-Ukraine war.

— Anniek Bao

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