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Nvidia’s Jensen Huang Lands in China for High-Stakes Talks Amid US Chip War Escalation

Nvidia’s Jensen Huang Lands in China for High-Stakes Talks Amid US Chip War Escalation

Published:
2025-07-10 12:45:14
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Nvidia's Huang visits China for crunch talks as chip crackdowns escalate at home

Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang touches down in Beijing as semiconductor tensions hit boiling point. The tech titan's surprise visit comes just days after Washington slapped fresh export controls on advanced AI chips—a move squarely targeting China's ambitions.

Behind closed doors: Huang's crisis diplomacy

Insiders say Huang aims to salvage Nvidia's $7B China business with custom chips that skirt new restrictions. But regulators on both sides appear locked in a game of semiconductor chicken—with billions in market cap at stake.

The chip giant walks a razor's edge: Keep Beijing happy without triggering more Washington wrath. Meanwhile, Wall Street analysts still price Nvidia like it's 1999—because nothing says 'sound valuation' like 80x forward earnings during a trade war.

Nvidia challenges export restrictions

Over the last year, Huang has become one of the few large US tech executives publicly criticizing American policy towards tech exports. He is in the camp that believes Washington’s attempts to curb China’s access to advanced semiconductors as both ineffective and potentially self-defeating by speeding the rise of domestic Chinese rivals like Huawei Technologies Co.

Earlier this year, Huang said restrictions were a “failed strategy” that would damage American innovation and industry. His firm is feeling the squeeze. Nvidia said in May that it’s projecting to lose approximately $8 billion in revenue this quarter, partly due to the US-imposed sanctions.

To adjust, Nvidia is working on a new lineup of lower-end artificial intelligence chips tailored to comply with the most recent US export controls. 

These chips will be less powerful but not quite baseline enough to occupy the bottom rung merely, and will instead play in the lucrative fast-growing AI and data center markets in China. Although the details are sketchy, these chips could hit the market as early as this year, according to reports in the Financial Times.

Despite these difficulties, Nvidia has had its share of historic wins. Just recently, it became the first company in the world to reach a market valuation of $4 trillion, buoyed by record global demand for its chips in the wake of the generative AI boom sparked by tools like OpenAI’s ChatGPT.

Washington launches broader crackdown in Southeast Asia

Though Nvidia hopes for a more balanced approach to export regulations, the US government isn’t looking to let up anytime soon. In a new escalation, the TRUMP administration plans to broaden chip export restrictions to Southeast Asian countries, including Malaysia and Thailand.

These nations have become important parts of the global chip supply chain, especially in assembly and packaging. However, American officials suspect some of the activity may be tied to smuggling or unauthorized resales of prohibited technology into China. The new limitations WOULD seek to close off such pathways, further restricting China’s access to cutting-edge semiconductors.

If implemented, such steps could create tighter borders for companies like Nvidia to navigate the region. For decades, Southeast Asia has been a manufacturing and distribution bridge between American companies and Chinese consumers. Curtailing that FLOW would bring new bottlenecks and cause Nvidia to reconsider its Asian logistics and partner strategies.

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