NVIDIA Corporation (NVDA) shares traded at $177.65 during midday trading, up 1.50%, as investors reacted to the company’s acquisition of SchedMD, the developer behind Slurm, a widely used workload management system for high-performance computing and artificial intelligence.
NVIDIA Corporation, NVDA
The deal highlights Nvidia’s continued push to deepen its software ecosystem while reinforcing its leadership across AI infrastructure.
NVIDIA confirmed that it has acquired SchedMD, though financial terms were not disclosed. The company said it will continue to develop and distribute Slurm as open-source, vendor-neutral software, preserving its broad adoption across the global HPC and AI community.
Slurm plays a critical role in managing complex workloads across large compute clusters. As AI and HPC systems scale in size and complexity, efficient scheduling and resource allocation become essential. Slurm is already used in more than half of the top 10 and top 100 supercomputers listed in the TOP500 rankings, underscoring its importance to advanced computing environments.
By bringing SchedMD in-house, Nvidia strengthens a key layer of the AI stack that sits between hardware and applications. The company emphasized that Slurm will remain open and vendor-neutral, ensuring support across diverse hardware and software environments. This approach aligns with Nvidia’s goal of expanding its accelerated computing platform without locking customers into proprietary systems.
Nvidia has collaborated with SchedMD for over a decade, and management said the acquisition will accelerate Slurm’s development to meet the needs of next-generation AI training and inference workloads. Slurm already supports Nvidia’s latest hardware and serves as critical infrastructure for foundation model developers and enterprise AI builders.
Nvidia is best known for its graphics processing units, which have evolved from gaming-focused hardware into core components for artificial intelligence. GPUs now power large language models and data-intensive workloads across cloud providers, research institutions, and enterprises.
Beyond hardware, Nvidia has built a broad software ecosystem led by CUDA, its platform for AI model development and training. The company is also expanding data center networking solutions to connect GPUs into large-scale systems capable of handling complex parallel tasks. Slurm fits naturally into this strategy by optimizing how those resources are scheduled and used.
Nvidia said the acquisition will allow users of its accelerated computing platform to better optimize workloads across entire compute infrastructures, including heterogeneous clusters. The company will continue offering open-source support, training, and development for Slurm to SchedMD’s customers, which span industries such as healthcare, autonomous driving, energy, financial services, manufacturing, and government.
Nvidia enters this acquisition from a position of exceptional financial strength. Over the past three years, the company has delivered revenue growth of 70.5%, supported by explosive demand for AI infrastructure. Operating margin stands at 58.84%, while net margin reaches 53.01%, reflecting strong pricing power and cost discipline.
The balance sheet remains robust, with a current ratio of 4.47 and a quick ratio of 3.71, signaling ample liquidity. Debt levels are minimal, with a debt-to-equity ratio of just 0.09. Nvidia’s Altman Z-Score of 65.57 points to strong financial stability, even as the company continues to invest aggressively in growth.
At current levels, Nvidia trades at a price-to-earnings ratio of 43.98, below its historical median of 52.81. The stock’s valuation reflects high expectations, supported by dominant market positioning. Analysts maintain a positive outlook, with an average target price of $250.56 and a recommendation score of 1.8.
Nvidia’s performance has been exceptional across time frames. The stock is up 32.35% year to date and 32.39% over one year. Three-year returns exceed 949%, while five-year gains surpass 1,200%, far outpacing the S&P 500.
Risks remain, including elevated volatility, reflected in a beta of 2.18, and recent insider selling activity. Still, Nvidia’s acquisition of SchedMD reinforces its long-term strategy of owning critical layers of the AI ecosystem, positioning the company to sustain growth as AI and HPC adoption continues to expand.
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