China, Trump and NVIDIA
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Why Nvidia’s and AMD’s China deal with Trump could backfire. The companies making the most money from the AI boom are the ones selling the processors, such as Nvidia and AMD.
Trump said on Monday that he might allow Nvidia to sell a more advanced artificial intelligence chip in China based on the chipmaker’s latest and most advanced Blackwell platform. The performance of H20 chips sold to China is restricted compared with those more advanced processors sold to customers in the US.
Nvidia and AMD are expected to pay the US government 15% of their China chip sales revenues.
Nvidia and AMD agreed to share 15% of their revenues from chip sales to China with the U.S. government, a U.S. government official has confirmed
Every Friday, we recap highlights of the news from China. This week, we look at why a tariff settlement matters to both China and the US, a semiconductor deal that drew criticism, and possible direct flight resumption.
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Nvidia's China market could be worth $56 billion next year, says Piper Sandler's Harsh Kumar
Harsh Kumar, Piper Sandler senior research analyst, joins 'The Exchange' to discuss if policy changes for Nvidia mean a lot for the company, how much of a moat Nvidia has overall and much more.
It has rebounded in epic fashion from lows experienced earlier this year, but can the company keep up this momentum?
Nvidia’s rock-and-a-hard-place position on selling artificial-intelligence chips to China might have just worsened, as Beijing has reportedly told companies not to buy the chips. Notifications have been sent to several companies discouraging them from using the H20 processors,