Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang dropped a four-word statement on the Lex Fridman podcast that set the AI world buzzing: “I think we’ve achieved AGI.”
The clip spread fast. Huang’s company powers roughly 80% of AI training worldwide, so when he says artificial general intelligence has arrived, people take note.
NVIDIA Corporation, NVDA
The podcast was released March 22. By March 24, it was already reshaping conversations across markets, research labs, and boardrooms.
But the headline needs context.
Fridman had posed a specific definition before asking the question: could an AI start and run a tech company worth more than $1 billion? That was the bar. Huang said we’re already there.
His framing is narrow. What qualifies under his definition is economic output — AI that creates measurable value quickly. What doesn’t qualify is everything else: long-horizon strategy, physical world reasoning, and the kind of common-sense judgment humans develop over years of lived experience.
Huang openly admitted that even hundreds of thousands of AI agents could not build Nvidia. That’s a telling caveat from the man making the AGI claim.
Academic researchers are pushing back. Their view of AGI requires human-level performance across all cognitive tasks — passing a bar exam is one thing, navigating an unfamiliar environment or sustaining a strategy over months is another. Current AI systems still hallucinate facts, struggle with novel reasoning, and lack genuine understanding.
The word “AGI” also carries real contractual weight. At companies like OpenAI and Microsoft, performance benchmarks and legal clauses are tied to whether AGI has officially been reached.
NVDA was trading at around $176 on March 23 and was down about 0.3% in early Monday trading.
At GTC earlier this month, Huang projected at least $1 trillion in chip sales from Blackwell and Vera Rubin platforms through 2027. That beat Wall Street consensus and added roughly $500 billion in new order visibility since October 2025.
Huang also praised Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing (TSM) as Nvidia’s most trusted supplier during the Fridman interview. He was more cautious about Elon Musk’s ambitions to put data centers in space, pointing to the challenge of cooling infrastructure in a vacuum.
His $3 trillion revenue projection — compared to $215.9 billion in fiscal 2026 — reflects the scale of the bet he’s making on AI demand having no near-term ceiling.
If the market believes AGI is here, demand for compute keeps growing. Nvidia makes the compute.
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