NVIDIA (NASDAQ:NVDA | NVDA Price Prediction) disclosed an expanded strategic partnership with Synopsys (NASDAQ:SNPS) tied to a $2 billion strategic investment earlier this year, and February reporting on the chipmaker’s most recent 13F flagged Synopsys as one of NVIDIA’s top holdings in Q4 2025, alongside Intel. Synopsys itself confirmed a $2.0 billion private placement of stock in Q1 FY2026, with proceeds earmarked to accelerate debt repayment from the Ansys deal. For retirement-focused investors who track smart money, this is the rare strategic position where the buyer and the customer are the same entity.
What NVIDIA Bought, and Why It Matters
NVIDIA is the world’s most important chip designer, and Synopsys is the company whose software it uses to design those chips. The $2 billion commitment lands as Synopsys digests its $35 billion Ansys acquisition, which closed in July 2025 and fused electronic design automation with physics-based simulation. CEO Jensen Huang has framed the moment plainly, calling the AI factory buildout “the largest infrastructure expansion in human history.” Every Blackwell 300 die, every Vera Rubin tile, and every networking ASIC NVIDIA ships runs through Synopsys tools first. Owning a stake in that toolchain is vertical integration without the operating risk.
The Thesis the Data Supports
Synopsys is monetizing AI complexity directly. Q2 FY2026 revenue hit $2.28 billion, up 42% year over year, with non-GAAP EPS of $3.35 beating consensus by 5.96%. The Design Automation segment, roughly 80% of revenue, posted adjusted operating margins of 43.3%, up from 40.9% a year earlier. Management raised FY2026 revenue guidance to a midpoint of $9.665 billion and non-GAAP EPS to $14.72 to $14.80, with free cash flow targeted at roughly $2.0 billion. CEO Sassine Ghazi attributed the strength to “AI scaling semiconductor demand, architectural diversity and complexity of chips and the systems they power.”
The thesis is reinforced by activist Elliott Investment Management, which acquired a multibillion-dollar stake and won a board seat for managing partner Jesse Cohn in May. Elliott is pushing for margins closer to Cadence’s, and the post-Ansys cost structure gives them room to deliver.
Returns So Far and the Retail Calculus
Synopsys shares closed at $508.35 on June 2, 2026, up 9.05% over the past year and 8.22% year to date. That trails the broader AI complex, NVIDIA itself is up 62.23% over the past year, which is precisely why the setup is interesting. Analyst consensus carries a target of $560.38 with 17 Buy or Strong Buy ratings against 1 Strong Sell. Forward earnings multiple sits near 33, full but not extreme for a software business growing 42%.
The risks are real. Roughly $10 billion in long-term debt remains from the Ansys financing, the Design IP segment is being restructured around a planned Processor IP Solutions divestiture, and export controls remain a swing factor.
The Take
Following NVIDIA into Synopsys warrants independent research and due diligence. The strategic logic is unambiguous: AI is making chip design exponentially harder, Synopsys sells the tools that solve that problem, and its largest customer just put $2 billion on the table to keep the roadmap moving. Retirement investors get a high-quality compounder with AI exposure that does not require betting on the next GPU cycle. The September 30, 2026 Investor Day is the next catalyst worth watching.