Alphabet Inc.'s (GOOGL) Google is making a significant push to shake up the AI chip market, and it's bringing Meta Platforms Inc (META) along for the ride. The goal? Cut their collective reliance on Nvidia Corp (NVDA) as demand for AI computing power continues its explosive growth.
Here's the basic play: Google is working on software modifications that make its proprietary chips play nice with PyTorch, the AI development framework that's essentially the industry standard. According to Reuters, this isn't just a technical upgrade. It's a strategic maneuver to make Google's chips a viable alternative to Nvidia's offerings for developers who've built their entire workflows around PyTorch.
Meta's involvement is particularly interesting. As one of the major forces behind the AI tools developers actually use, Meta brings credibility and infrastructure to the table. In return for its collaboration, Meta gets expanded access to Google's chip setup. It's a win-win arrangement that Google plans to leverage both for its own AI services and for customers using its cloud platform.
Nvidia Feels the Heat
This partnership arrives at a moment when competition in AI hardware is getting genuinely intense. Nvidia isn't exactly sweating yet, but the pressure is building. The company recently addressed speculation about its widely discussed potential $100 billion deal with OpenAI, clarifying that the agreement remains nonbinding and that its sales forecasts don't hinge on closing that particular deal.
Nvidia continues to emphasize the strength of its complete AI stack as its competitive moat, and for good reason. The company hit a historic milestone in October 2025, becoming the first to surpass a $4.5 trillion market cap. That put it ahead of tech giants like Apple Inc. (AAPL), Google, and Microsoft Corp (MSFT).
But markets this big attract competition, and that's exactly what's happening. Jim Cramer has weighed in with an interesting take: Broadcom Inc (AVGO) might actually be the biggest beneficiary of any Google-Meta chip collaboration. Cramer pointed to Broadcom CEO Hock Tan's strategic acumen as a critical advantage in this evolving landscape.
Under Tan's leadership, Broadcom has steadily expanded its footprint in custom AI chips and advanced networking hardware, positioning itself as a legitimate challenger to Nvidia's dominance. Cramer highlighted Tan's role in driving this competitive threat forward.
NVDA Price Action: Nvidia shares were up 1.21% at $173.00 during premarket trading on Wednesday, according to market data.




