NVIDIA Corp. (NASDAQ:NVDA) could become a critical enabler of Japan’s artificial intelligence ambitions, according to Counterpoint Research, which said the chipmaker’s latest announcements in Tokyo position it at the center of the country’s emerging sovereign AI ecosystem.
NVIDIA’s Japan AI Push Wins Analyst Backing
Following NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang’s visit to Tokyo, Counterpoint analyst Marc Einstein said Japan has lagged regional peers in AI development despite significant government support for semiconductors. However, he believes the country’s strategy is beginning to broaden beyond chips.
“Japan has largely sat on the sidelines of the AI boom, but it appears that it is finally waking up,” Einstein wrote, noting that while the government has committed about $65 billion to the semiconductor sector through 2030, it has done less to develop the broader AI ecosystem.
Sovereign AI Infrastructure Takes Shape
Counterpoint argued that NVIDIA could fill that gap by supplying the infrastructure, AI models and software needed to build Japan’s sovereign AI capabilities.
The research firm highlighted plans for a national AI superfactory powered by 27,500 Rubin GPUs through government-backed Noetra, as well as growing adoption of NVIDIA’s Nemotron models by companies including SoftBank Group Corp.’s (OTC:SFTBY) SB Intuitions, Hitachi Ltd. (OTC:HTHIY), NTT DATA Group Corp. (OTC:NTTDF) and privately held Sakana AI.
Physical AI And Industrial Partnerships Expand
Einstein also pointed to Japan’s strengths in industrial automation as a long-term opportunity for NVIDIA’s physical AI strategy.
He said the country’s leadership in robotics and manufacturing, combined with government plans to deploy 10 million AI-equipped robots across 18 sectors by 2040, creates a favorable backdrop for AI-powered industrial systems.
NVIDIA has already announced partnerships with Toyota Motor Corp. (NYSE:TM), Honda Motor Co. (NYSE:HMC), FANUC Corp. (OTC:FANUF) and Kawasaki Heavy Industries Ltd. (OTC:KWHIF).
Why NVIDIA Could Become Japan’s Missing AI Link
The analyst said Japan lacks a domestic AI champion capable of matching NVIDIA’s ecosystem, making the U.S. chipmaker a potential “missing link” in the country’s AI development.
He added that Japan also remains strategically important to NVIDIA because of its dominance in semiconductor materials and equipment used to manufacture advanced AI chips and high-bandwidth memory packages.
Stock Performance And Technical Analysis
NVIDIA stock fell nearly 3% in Friday premarket trading as investors reduced exposure to large-cap technology and semiconductor stocks. Nasdaq futures were down 1.83%, while S&P 500 futures lost 0.84%.
The stock is trading 0.2% below its 20-day simple moving average of $202.22 and 3.8% below its 50-day SMA of $209.79. That suggests a short-term pullback, although the longer-term trend remains intact.
NVDA continues to trade 1.7% above its 100-day SMA of $198.56 and 5% above its 200-day SMA of $192.29.
The relative strength index stands at 52.73, indicating neutral momentum. The reading suggests the stock is neither overbought nor oversold.
The 20-day SMA remains below the 50-day SMA, signaling short-term weakness. However, the 50-day SMA remains above the 200-day SMA, preserving the longer-term bullish trend.
Technical resistance is near $214, close to the 50-day moving average. Initial support sits around $199.50, just above the 100-day SMA, making it an important level for investors watching for buying interest.
NVIDIA Price Action
NVDA Stock Price Activity: NVIDIA shares were down 2.67% at $201.86 during premarket trading on Friday, according to Benzinga Pro data.
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