Nvidia said it has received assurances that it can sell its artificial intelligence chip in China, following a meeting between its Chief Executive and Trump.
The reversal comes after Trump’s Commerce Department restricted sales of the chip in April, costing the company billions. pic.twitter.com/WMehuNnEfc
With the H20 back in play, Nvidia isn’t just re-entering the China
market—it’s doubling down on a strategy that straddles profit and policy.
Wall Street Loves a Good Plot Twist
Predictably, Nvidia’s share price soared. The company is hovering
around a $4 trillion
market cap, and this China green light adds another growth chapter to
the AI gold rush. For suppliers like Samsung, which
provides memory for the H20 and other Nvidia chips, the news was equally
bullish. Analysts expect surging demand for HBM3 and GDDR7 memory—the key pieces
of tech that enable the latest chips.
Nvidia's market cap at the time of writing (screenshot).
Nvidia’s stock story has been one of dominance, innovation, and just
enough political maneuvering to stay ahead of regulation. With China back in
the revenue column, the company may claw back billions that looked lost just
weeks ago.
The Tightrope Between Politics and Profit
Of course, this isn’t just about hardware. It’s a diplomatic balancing
act with Jensen Huang as its acrobatic lead. Nvidia’s CEO has been walking a
tightrope—meeting with American lawmakers one day and flying to Beijing the
next. His pitch? Letting Nvidia sell to China isn’t a national security
threat—it’s an economic necessity for the U.S. to remain AI-relevant. Indeed,
he’s even telling the U.S. to onshore
much of its tech manufacturing.
Washington doesn’t exactly agree, especially when it comes to “dual-use” concerns—tech that
could power both industry and military. But Huang insists that the H20, like
the newer RTX Pro variant just launched, is designed for civilian applications
like logistics, industrial automation, and cloud services. That might be true
for now—but long-term, the game is bigger than any one chip.
China’s Not Just Waiting Around
While Nvidia’s licenses get rubber-stamped, China isn’t sitting idle. Beijing
is throwing massive resources at developing homegrown AI chip alternatives.
Nvidia may be back in the market today, but the long-term play for China is
tech independence. That means Nvidia’s position—though strong—might not be as
permanent as investors would like.
Jensen Huang, CEO of US tech giant Nvidia, on Tuesday praised China's rapid advancements in artificial intelligence (AI) during his visit to Beijing, describing the Chinese market as both "large" and "dynamic." Huang emphasized China's strong talent pool, noting that China is… pic.twitter.com/n3ELHtqkv5
This return to the Chinese market is undeniably a big win, but it may
also be the start of a much fiercer race, one where geopolitical tensions and
technological supremacy are fully intertwined.
The Takeaway
Nvidia’s resumption of H20 chip sales to China is more than a licensing
update—it’s a turning point. The company is poised to recover billions in lost
revenue, with financial upside extending to memory suppliers like Samsung and
other players in the AI chip ecosystem.
But this is also a story of timing: Nvidia’s presence in China depends
on a fragile balance between regulatory permissions and fast-moving
competition. The U.S. wants to keep cutting-edge AI out of Beijing’s hands,
while Nvidia wants to maintain its global dominance. For now, the two have
found a workaround. But the tension between profit and policy isn’t going
away—it’s just entering a new chapter.
For more stories around the edge of finance and tech, visit our Trending section.
Nvidia gets U.S. approval to ship H20 AI chips to China, reversing export
curbs—huge for AI, stocks, and geopolitics.
Nvidia said it has received assurances that it can sell its artificial intelligence chip in China, following a meeting between its Chief Executive and Trump.
The reversal comes after Trump’s Commerce Department restricted sales of the chip in April, costing the company billions. pic.twitter.com/WMehuNnEfc
With the H20 back in play, Nvidia isn’t just re-entering the China
market—it’s doubling down on a strategy that straddles profit and policy.
Wall Street Loves a Good Plot Twist
Predictably, Nvidia’s share price soared. The company is hovering
around a $4 trillion
market cap, and this China green light adds another growth chapter to
the AI gold rush. For suppliers like Samsung, which
provides memory for the H20 and other Nvidia chips, the news was equally
bullish. Analysts expect surging demand for HBM3 and GDDR7 memory—the key pieces
of tech that enable the latest chips.
Nvidia's market cap at the time of writing (screenshot).
Nvidia’s stock story has been one of dominance, innovation, and just
enough political maneuvering to stay ahead of regulation. With China back in
the revenue column, the company may claw back billions that looked lost just
weeks ago.
The Tightrope Between Politics and Profit
Of course, this isn’t just about hardware. It’s a diplomatic balancing
act with Jensen Huang as its acrobatic lead. Nvidia’s CEO has been walking a
tightrope—meeting with American lawmakers one day and flying to Beijing the
next. His pitch? Letting Nvidia sell to China isn’t a national security
threat—it’s an economic necessity for the U.S. to remain AI-relevant. Indeed,
he’s even telling the U.S. to onshore
much of its tech manufacturing.
Washington doesn’t exactly agree, especially when it comes to “dual-use” concerns—tech that
could power both industry and military. But Huang insists that the H20, like
the newer RTX Pro variant just launched, is designed for civilian applications
like logistics, industrial automation, and cloud services. That might be true
for now—but long-term, the game is bigger than any one chip.
China’s Not Just Waiting Around
While Nvidia’s licenses get rubber-stamped, China isn’t sitting idle. Beijing
is throwing massive resources at developing homegrown AI chip alternatives.
Nvidia may be back in the market today, but the long-term play for China is
tech independence. That means Nvidia’s position—though strong—might not be as
permanent as investors would like.
Jensen Huang, CEO of US tech giant Nvidia, on Tuesday praised China's rapid advancements in artificial intelligence (AI) during his visit to Beijing, describing the Chinese market as both "large" and "dynamic." Huang emphasized China's strong talent pool, noting that China is… pic.twitter.com/n3ELHtqkv5
This return to the Chinese market is undeniably a big win, but it may
also be the start of a much fiercer race, one where geopolitical tensions and
technological supremacy are fully intertwined.
The Takeaway
Nvidia’s resumption of H20 chip sales to China is more than a licensing
update—it’s a turning point. The company is poised to recover billions in lost
revenue, with financial upside extending to memory suppliers like Samsung and
other players in the AI chip ecosystem.
But this is also a story of timing: Nvidia’s presence in China depends
on a fragile balance between regulatory permissions and fast-moving
competition. The U.S. wants to keep cutting-edge AI out of Beijing’s hands,
while Nvidia wants to maintain its global dominance. For now, the two have
found a workaround. But the tension between profit and policy isn’t going
away—it’s just entering a new chapter.
For more stories around the edge of finance and tech, visit our Trending section.
Louis Parks has lived and worked in and around the Middle East for much of his professional career. He writes about the meeting of the tech and finance worlds.
Robinhood Invests US$75 Million in OpenAI via Investment Vehicle
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