Key Takeaways AI search platform Perplexity has committed to integrating Nvidia’s Vera CPU into its live infrastructure following comprehensive performance evaluations Testing revealed Vera p
Key Takeaways
- AI search platform Perplexity has committed to integrating Nvidia’s Vera CPU into its live infrastructure following comprehensive performance evaluations
- Testing revealed Vera processors executed AI agent programming assignments 50% faster than conventional CPUs, with test environment operations showing up to 90% speed improvements
- Nvidia has set an ambitious target of generating $20 billion in Vera CPU revenue before its current fiscal year closes
- The Vera launch positions Nvidia as a direct challenger to Intel (INTC) and AMD in the massive $200 billion processor marketplace
- Analysts maintain a Strong Buy consensus on NVDA shares, projecting an average 12-month target of $309.33, representing approximately 57% potential gains from current levels near $196
After years of GPU market supremacy, Nvidia is making an aggressive push into the central processing unit sector — and customer adoption is accelerating rapidly.
NVIDIA Corporation, NVDA
On Tuesday, Perplexity, the AI-powered search platform, announced its commitment to implement Nvidia’s Vera CPU across its operational infrastructure. This strategic decision followed rigorous internal evaluations demonstrating that Vera processors handled AI agent coding operations approximately 50% faster than competing traditional chips. Certain testing scenarios revealed performance improvements reaching 90% faster execution speeds.
Nate Kupp, Perplexity’s Vice President of Computer Enterprise and Infrastructure, expressed strong enthusiasm: “Vera really stood out to us as just like a dead-on fit for a lot of the core workloads that we have.”
While Perplexity hasn’t disclosed specific chip quantities in its purchase agreement, the partnership expands Nvidia’s roster of early adopters, which already features prominent names such as OpenAI, Anthropic, and Oracle.
Vera’s Architecture Optimized for AI Agent Operations
Conventional processors were architected with human usage patterns in mind — intermittent activity, task switching, and periodic downtime. AI agents operate under completely different parameters.
Vera’s design incorporates 88 proprietary Olympus cores, specifically engineered to deliver exceptional single-core throughput and accelerated memory bandwidth. The processor maintains superior energy efficiency compared to equivalent chips, making it ideally configured for the persistent, uninterrupted AI operations that organizations like Perplexity require.
Beyond theoretical specifications, Vera demonstrated impressive real-world capabilities — Perplexity subjected it to authentic workflows including code repository duplication and software validation procedures, the types of genuine operational demands that outweigh artificial benchmark metrics.
Challenging Intel and AMD’s Market Dominance
With Vera’s introduction, Nvidia is mounting a direct challenge to Intel and AMD, the longtime suppliers of processors spanning consumer laptops to enterprise data centers. This represents a $200 billion addressable market opportunity.
Intel shares declined 9.66% while AMD dropped 6.51% following the Perplexity announcement, underscoring investor concern about Nvidia’s expanding CPU ambitions. Nvidia has established an aggressive internal benchmark of approximately $20 billion in Vera-related revenue by its fiscal year conclusion — a substantial initial foothold in this competitive segment.
Nvidia has successfully deployed Vera systems with leading cloud infrastructure and artificial intelligence organizations including Amazon, Google, and Microsoft. With Perplexity joining this customer ecosystem, Nvidia continues strengthening its CPU market presence even as GPU competitors like OpenAI — which recently unveiled its proprietary Jalapeño AI chip developed alongside Broadcom — attempt to encroach upon Nvidia’s graphics processing stronghold.
NVDA shares currently trade around $196. Wall Street analysts monitored by TipRanks assign the stock a Strong Buy rating, with 36 of 37 analysts issuing Buy recommendations. The consensus 12-month price target stands at $309.33, suggesting potential upside of approximately 57%.
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