Latest news with #AnjneyMidha


Axios
2 days ago
- Business
- Axios
Exclusive: Mistral debuts its first reasoning models
French AI startup Mistral is launching its first reasoning models, aiming to rival new offerings from OpenAI, DeepSeek and others, Axios has learned. Why it matters: Reasoning models aim to boost accuracy by using more computing power at inference time, a trend gaining steam amid diminishing returns from building ever-larger language models. Driving the news: Mistral is releasing two versions of its new Magistral family of reasoning models. The first, Magistral Small, is a 24-billion-parameter model that is being released under an open-source license. Magistral Medium is more powerful, but proprietary and currently available only in preview mode. Mistral says the new models are designed for a range of real-world tasks in areas including law, finance, health care, and engineering. The proprietary version, Mistral says, is capable of 1,000 tokens per second, outpacing the performance of rivals. Between the lines: Unlike many models that reason primarily in English, Mistral's can "think" in the query's native language, a potentially more efficient approach. The big picture: Based in France, Mistral has benefited from both its embrace of open source as well as the fact that it offers an alternative to the large American and Chinese tech companies. Just 15 months after launching its first paid products, Mistral has racked up over $100 million in contracted sales, according to a source familiar with its finances. What they're saying: Anjney Midha from a16z, who led the company's Series A funding round and sits on its board, said that Mistral's focus on open source is its key selling point, even more than its unique geography. Midha noted that while big shifts in technology tend to be initially led by proprietary efforts, businesses quickly gravitate toward the advantages of open source.
Yahoo
28-02-2025
- Business
- Yahoo
Investors may be badly underestimating this long-term tailwind for Nvidia
Listen and subscribe to Opening Bid on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, YouTube, or wherever you find your favorite podcasts. Short-term-minded Nvidia (NVDA) investors may have forgotten something in their race to dump the stock after earnings this week: the long-term profit tailwind of sovereign artificial intelligence. "I think that you're going to hear a lot more about these infrastructure build-outs from nation-states," a16z generator partner and Mistral AI board member Anjney Midha said on Yahoo Finance's Opening Bid podcast (see video above or listen below). "Sometimes these are lagging indicators. It might be underreported on — it just takes a while for people to realize that nation-state priorities are then turning into enterprise budgets." The build-out of AI infrastructure by major countries is beginning to take form in large numbers. Earlier this month, the European Union earmarked 200 billion euros for investment in AI, including a new European fund of 20 billion euros for AI gigafactories. OpenAI, Oracle (ORCL), and Softbank (SFTBY) said in late January they would invest up to $500 billion in the coming years in an AI infrastructure project called Stargate. At the core of these build-outs will be high-powered chips made by AI leader Nvidia, experts say. Read more: How does Nvidia make money? Nvidia has said Canada, Denmark, and Indonesia have announced initiatives to develop sovereign AI infrastructure powered by its AI chips. "We think AI models are critical national infrastructure," Midha added. "We think these AI factories that turn tokens into intelligence [are] critical national infrastructure. And I see that segment accelerating." While sovereign AI represents a long-term profit opportunity for Nvidia, in the near term, the stock could take its cue from a mixed first quarter outlook shared this week. In its earnings release on Wednesday evening, Nvidia said it expects gross profit margins of 70.6% to 71% in the first quarter as it contends with the production ramp-up of its new Blackwell chip. The margin outlook of 71% is "a little concerning," Benchmark Company managing director and senior research analyst Cody Acree said on Yahoo Finance's Market Domination. "I think that's indicative of more pricing pressure, more competition from AMD (AMD), and more price sensitivity at their customers as they're investing their own dollars to create their own ASICs [application-specific integrated circuits]." After toggling between gains and losses on Thursday, Nvidia stock closed down 8.48%. The stock rose slightly in premarket trading on Friday. Listen: Why Nvidia may be unstoppable Nvidia execs sought to push back against the bears on the company's earnings call. The bears have put forth a narrative that there will be a digestion period for AI investments by hyperscalers such as Amazon (AMZN) and that Nvidia's margins may have peaked. "We're going to have to continue to scale as demand is quite high, and customers are anxious and impatient to get their Blackwell systems," Nvidia founder and CEO Jensen Huang said. Huang teased several new powerful chips set to be unveiled at the company's March 17 GTC conference. Nvidia CFO Colette Kress added: "Once our Blackwell fully rounds, we can improve our cost and our gross margin. So, we expect to probably be in the mid-70s later this year." Three times each week, I field insight-filled conversations and chats with the biggest names in business and markets on Opening Bid. You can find more episodes on our video hub or watch on your preferred streaming service. Brian Sozzi is Yahoo Finance's Executive Editor. Follow Sozzi on X @BrianSozzi, Instagram, and LinkedIn. Tips on stories? Email