One employee at Nvidia — the AI chipmaker whose stock surge this year has made it one of the world’s most valuable companies — took to Blind, the app where tech workers can post anonymously, and responded to a question from a Google worker who asked Nvidia engineers “how rich are you?”
“Bought a 100k family car in all cash and didn’t have to think about it,” the Nvidia worker wrote on the social media app.
“Really depends on your level,” he wrote, adding that their net worth was “only around” $3 million though they “still have 3M unvested and very comfortable.”
In response, workers at rival tech firms — including Google and Meta, among the most prestigious in Silicon Valley — are admitting to their envy.
“The more I hear about Nvidia employees and their riches, the more jealous I feel,” a Meta employee wrote on the Blind app.
The Meta worker griped that “some people have to only work for like couple of years to build generational wealth while I need to work like forever to feel safe about retiring!”
Another Meta employee wrote on Blind that a neighbor who started at Nvidia five years ago as an entry level engineer was now worth $20 million.
An employee from another tech rival, Snap, took to Blind and wrote that he and his wife are worth $14.8 million at age 32.
But when compared to “old timer friends” at Nvidia, “every single one of them is worth over $25 million.”
“It’s nuts,” the Snap employee wrote on Blind.
The Nvidia employee who dished on his newfound wealth ended his post with: “Thanks JHH.”
“JHH” are the initials for Jen-Hsun “Jensen” Huang, the co-founder and CEO of Nvidia who is credited with steering the company and molding it into the world’s dominant maker of semiconductors used to power artificial intelligence.
Some current and former employees at Nvidia described a pressure-cooker environment that demands seven-day work weeks, long hours and frequent shouting matches and fights at meetings.
But employees decide to brave it all due to the “golden handcuffs” that the company places on them in the form of stock compensation packages that vest after four years — meaning that workers are free to exercise stock options once the vesting period ends.
The Post has sought comment from Nvidia.
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