Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang draws crowds in Tokyo, meets AI supply chain partners

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Jensen Huang showed up in Tokyo on July 15, handed out red bean cakes to fans in the Kanda neighborhood, and quietly reminded the world that Nvidia’s AI empire runs on relationships, not just GPUs.

The Nvidia CEO’s Japan visit carried more weight than the pastry giveaway might suggest. It came after a growing unease in Japanese business circles, sometimes called “Japan passing,” triggered by Huang’s earlier Asia tour in June that focused heavily on South Korea and seemingly skipped Japan altogether.

A $5 million bet that changed everything

The centerpiece of Huang’s Tokyo trip was a celebration in Akihabara marking the 30th anniversary of Nvidia’s partnership with SEGA. Back in the mid-1990s, SEGA made a $5 million investment in Nvidia when the chipmaker was struggling to stay alive. Huang met with SEGA CEO Haruki Satomi and legendary game designer Yu Suzuki during the event, expressing gratitude for the bet SEGA placed on his company three decades ago.

AI data centers and Mitsubishi Heavy Industries

Nvidia is reportedly in discussions with Mitsubishi Heavy Industries about infrastructure for AI data centers, specifically around cooling and energy management solutions. The visit also served as a broader reaffirmation of Nvidia’s commitment to expanding its AI and robotics ecosystem in Japan.

Why crypto investors should pay attention

Nvidia’s Tokyo agenda contained zero discussion of cryptocurrency. No mentions of mining hardware, no nods to blockchain infrastructure, no hints about tokenized AI compute networks. The company’s strategic focus continues to tilt decisively toward enterprise AI and data center partnerships.

Nvidia’s deepening ties in Japan, combined with its South Korea push, suggest the company is deliberately diversifying its Asian supply chain relationships beyond Taiwan and China.

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