Nvidia CEO Takes a Shot at U.S. Policy Cutting Off AI Chip Sales to China
- Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang criticized U.S. Export controls in May 2025 for cutting off AI chip sales to China, impacting Nvidia's business there.
- The restrictions followed a trade war and blocked sales of the H20 AI chip, causing a $4.5 billion write-down and expected $8 billion in revenue loss.
- Huang highlighted China's significance as a $50 billion market and noted that it hosts a large portion of global AI talent, describing the country as a key platform for achieving worldwide success.
- He praised President Trump's vision while warning that export controls may strengthen Chinese competitors and risk losing U.S. AI leadership.
- Despite losses in China, Nvidia's core segments grew strongly, and Huang plans to engage internationally to sustain U.S. Technology leadership.
27 Articles
27 Articles
Nvidia Lays Out Worst-Case Scenario in Bid to Open China Market
Welcome to Tech In Depth, our daily newsletter with reporting and analysis about the business of tech from Bloomberg’s journalists around the world. Today, Ian King reports on Nvidia’s increasing public campaign to persuade the Trump administration to ease restrictions on the export of advanced chips to China.
The 3 biggest takeaways from Nvidia's Q1 earnings call: China, China, China
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang repeatedly criticized the US export controls on chips against China during the company's Q1 earnings call.Artur Widak/NurPhotoNvidia's revenue for Q1 beat Wall Street's expectations despite China restrictions.CEO Jensen Huang provided sobering remarks on the impacts of losing the Chinese market.Huang, however, maintained high praise for some of President Donald Trump's policies.The moment Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang had the f…
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