UK filings reveal Nvidia’s $196M stake in Revolut

UK corporate filings have disclosed the size of NVIDIA’s investment in fintech giant Revolut, showing that NVentures, the chipmaker’s venture capital arm, holds 141,834 shares worth approximately $196 million in the digital bank.

A Quiet Bet on Fintech

The disclosure, surfaced through Britain’s Companies House registry, offers a rare window into the scale of NVIDIA’s bet on Revolut. NVentures acquired its stake through Revolut’s November 2025 secondary share sale, which valued the London-based neobank at $75 billion. That round was led by Coatue, Greenoaks, Dragoneer, and Fidelity, with NVIDIA’s venture division among notable participants alongside Andreessen Horowitz, Franklin Templeton, and T. Rowe Price. Bbeincrypto YYahoo Finance YYahoo Finance Fforbes Bbinance

Based on the round’s issuance price of roughly $1,380 per share, NVentures’ 141,834 shares carry a value of approximately $195.9 million. Neither NVIDIA nor Revolut had previously disclosed the size of the holding. Pphemex Bbeincrypto

Beyond Chips

The investment underscores NVIDIA’s expanding ambitions beyond semiconductor manufacturing. Revolut has been rebuilding its AI infrastructure around a transaction foundation model powered by NVIDIA’s accelerated computing platform, a partnership the two companies showcased at NVIDIA’s GTC conference in March 2026. The model is designed to improve fraud detection, credit decisioning, and customer engagement across Revolut’s platform of more than 50 million users. Nnvidia Nnvidia

Revolut’s Rising Trajectory

Revolut’s valuation has continued to climb since NVentures bought in. In June 2026, Bloomberg reported that the company was exploring a new secondary share sale at a $115 billion valuation, a 53 percent increase from the November 2025 round, as it moves closer to a potential IPO. Revolut reported $4 billion in revenue for 2024 and has been targeting further growth in 2026 as it expands its banking licenses across Europe and beyond. YYahoo Finance Ttechfundingnews

The filing adds to a pattern of major technology companies taking strategic positions in high-growth fintech firms, blurring the lines between silicon and financial services.