Why Nvidia stock is rebounding around 2% today

Why Nvidia stock is rebounding around 2% today
Utkarsh Roshan
08 Jun 2026, 17:41 PM

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NVDA buy

Buy Nvidia (NVDA). The news adds concrete AI-infrastructure demand signals: SK hynix next-gen AI memory R&D, SK Telecom gigawatt AI cloud on Nvidia DSX, and NAVER scaling to gigawatt capacity—all tied to Nvidia platforms/software. This directly supports future GPU/accelerator and networking/software pull-through after the Broadcom-guidance-driven selloff. Key risk: a renewed rate shock or further semis guidance weakness that overwhelms partnership optimism and drives another broad de-risking in tech/semis.

Key Risk: Rates/semis guidance worsen again and trigger another broad selloff that crushes NVDA regardless of partnerships.

SOXX buy

Buy iShares Semiconductor ETF (SOXX). The article shows the rebound is sector-wide “risk-on” as investors rotate back into semis/large-cap tech. Nvidia-specific catalysts are likely to pull sentiment across the group (memory, networking, and AI infrastructure supply chain). Key risk: guidance-led earnings downgrades spread beyond semis, causing investors to cut exposure to the whole sector, not just NVDA.

Key Risk: More company guidance disappointments spread across semis and force a sector-wide de-rating.

  • Nvidia stock rebounds as investors return to chip stocks.
  • Company expands AI infrastructure partnerships across South Korea.
  • Huang says recent tech selloff presents a buying opportunity.

Nvidia shares rose on Monday as investors returned to semiconductor and large-cap technology stocks, while the company unveiled a series of new artificial intelligence partnerships in South Korea.

Shares of Nvidia climbed nearly 2%. The gain came as the Nasdaq advanced 2.06% and the S&P 500 rose 0.68% during a broad risk-on session for technology stocks.

The move recovered only a portion of Nvidia's 6.2% decline on Friday, when semiconductor stocks came under pressure following weaker-than-expected guidance from Broadcom and renewed concerns about the interest-rate outlook.

South Korea partnerships expand AI footprint

Over the weekend and into Monday, Nvidia announced several initiatives in South Korea focused on strengthening the country's artificial intelligence infrastructure.

The company entered into a multiyear technology partnership with SK hynix to jointly develop next-generation memory technologies for AI factories and support growing global demand for AI infrastructure.

The partnership will also involve the use of Nvidia's AI software and simulation tools to improve semiconductor design and manufacturing processes.

Separately, Nvidia and SK Telecom said they plan to build a gigawatt-scale AI cloud in South Korea using Nvidia's DSX platform. The first AI factory is expected to come online in 2027.

According to the companies, the infrastructure will support sovereign AI, enterprise AI, physical AI and agentic AI applications across the country.

The partnership will also include joint research into next-generation AI factory architectures.

Nvidia also expanded its collaboration with NAVER. Under the initiative, NAVER plans to scale its AI infrastructure from an initial 55 megawatts to gigawatt-level capacity using Nvidia's DSX platform.

The project is intended to support AI factories, sovereign AI models and future versions of NAVER's HyperCLOVA X models while strengthening South Korea's domestic AI ecosystem.

Nvidia Chief Executive Officer Jensen Huang also disclosed a new collaboration with South Korea's LG Group during his visit to Seoul.

"We are working with them in motor technology as well as mechanical systems so that we can bring together humanoid robotics and the future of robotics," Huang told reporters after meeting LG Group Chairman Koo Kwang-mo.

According to Huang, the partnership will focus on humanoid robots as well as data center technologies.

Huang calls pullback a buying opportunity

The South Korea announcements came as technology stocks continued to digest a sharp selloff that began late last week.

South Korea's benchmark Kospi Index fell on Monday as investors reduced exposure to AI-related stocks following weakness in US technology shares.

The selloff had been triggered by concerns about a potential interest-rate hike and a broader reassessment of AI-related valuations.

Asked about the market decline during his visit to Seoul, Huang characterized the weakness as a buying opportunity and reiterated his long-term confidence in artificial intelligence.

"We're at the beginning of it, and whatever happened to the stock market, you should be very happy because now you can buy at a discount," Huang said.

"Everybody should be very excited," he added after meeting SK Group Chairman Chey Tae-won.

Huang argued that the global buildout of AI infrastructure remains in its early stages and said demand for the data centers, computing systems and chips required to support future AI services is likely to continue expanding.

His comments echoed a message he has repeatedly delivered in recent years: that artificial intelligence will fundamentally reshape industries, economies and the way people work, creating substantial long-term demand for the infrastructure that powers those systems.