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Trump opens door for Nvidia in China — but both the market and Beijing shrug

President Trump's move to allow Nvidia to sell more advanced AI chips to China may not be much of a win for anyone.

Why it matters: The approval of Nvidia's No. 2 chip is drawing criticism in the U.S. over national security fears — and at the same time it's unclear whether China even wants what Nvidia is being allowed to offer.


The big picture: The U.S. and China are locked in an AI race, and Nvidia — the dominant AI chipmaker — is stuck in the middle.

  • U.S. export restrictions have locked Nvidia out of a market CEO Jensen Huang estimates at $50 billion this year and hundreds of billions by the end of the decade.
  • Nvidia says its absence only accelerates Chinese chipmakers' progress in closing its technological lead, which it argues is a national security risk of its own.

The latest: Trump is now allowing Nvidia to sell its H200 chips to China, with the U.S. government getting a 25% cut from any sales. The chips are a major upgrade from the H20, the heavily downgraded model Nvidia was forced to design under previous export rules and which China largely rejected.

  • Trump is touting the approval of the H200 as a reversal of Biden-era policy. "The Biden Administration forced our Great Companies to spend BILLIONS OF DOLLARS building "degraded" products that nobody wanted, a terrible idea that slowed Innovation, and hurt the American Worker," Trump wrote Monday on Truth Social.

Yes, but: While by far the most powerful chip Nvidia has been allowed to sell in China, the H200 is still a full generation behind Nvidia's newest Blackwell chips.

  • And Beijing, intent on building up its domestic chip industry, isn't rushing to buy them.
  • Regulators there are set to limit access to the H200s, requiring would-be buyers to explain why domestic chip options weren't sufficient for their needs, the FT reported Tuesday, citing people with knowledge of the matter.
  • Huang himself has said he wasn't sure whether China would accept them.

The impact for Nvidia has also been muted. Its shares closed down 0.3% Tuesday, signaling that investors aren't factoring in much upside from the announcement.

  • William Blair analyst Sebastien Naji wrote that while the move is "likely" to boost revenue this fiscal year, he's not raising long-term estimates without evidence China is actually placing orders.

Friction point: Critics argue that selling H200s could help China steal U.S. technology to advance its own chip sector.

Reality check: One factor may blunt the impact for both Nvidia and security hawks: China already has many Nvidia chips.

  • Over $1 billion worth of banned chips had entered China though the black market during export restrictions, FT reported in July.
  • Just Tuesday, U.S. prosecutors said they disrupted a China-linked smuggling network trafficking more than $160 million in restricted Nvidia chips — including H200s.

The intrigue: In the indictment, the U.S. Attorney's Office warned that the chips getting into China risked "compromising America's technological edge" in AI, threatening national security, a day after Trump moved to allow their sale.

The bottom line: Nvidia has been lobbying to sell H200s in China for a long time, but right now the deal's looking like it may not move the needle much for anyone.

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