Jensen Huang, Chief Executive Officer of the Nvidia Corp., speaks to the media members in Beijing, China on Wednesday, July 16, 2025.
Na Bian | Bloomberg | Getty pictures
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang is supposed to send advanced chips to China on Wednesday than his current generation because he wants to revive sales in the second largest economy in the world.
The comments come to Nvidia on Monday that it will resume the sales of its H20 chip for artificial secret services to China, which will reversed an earlier ban. The H20 is a less stunned semiconductor that was developed for AI workloads that correspond to the US export restrictions to China.
“I hope to bring further advanced chips to China than in the H20,” said Huang during a press conference in Beijing, China, in response to a CNBC question.
“And the reason for this is that the technology continues … today Hopper's is going to be great, but in a few years we will have more and better and better technologies, and I think it makes sense that everything we can sell in China will continue to be better over time,” he said in relation to Hopper, the chip architecture of NVIDIA, which the H20 is based.
NVIDIA was caught in the crosshairs of US China stresses on trade and technology. The Tech giant has exposed several restrictions that forced him to limit the access of its most advanced chips to China. In response to this, Nvidia has developed semiconductors that correspond to the export restrictions such as the H20.
NVIDIA took up a Writedown of 4.5 billion US dollars for the unsold H20 inventory in May and said that sales in its last financial quartal would have $ 2.5 billion higher without Export Bordstones.
Huang has used a fine border between the praise of US President Donald Trump's politics in relation to the redesign of the chip production of America and at the same time for changes in the curbs to China.
The Nvidia boss has argued that the Chinese AI market could be worth $ 50 billion over the next two to three years and that it would be an enormous loss for American companies not to be part of it. Huang also said CNBC this year that the Chinese rival of Nvidia Huawei “China insured” if US companies cannot participate in the market.
“Export control is things that are outside of our control and can be quite annoying for our business. It is our job to inform governments about nature and the unintentional consequences of the guidelines they produced,” said Huang during his visit to Beijing.
NVIDIA has also created a roadmap for the publication of advanced chips, although the US government would enable NVIDIA to sell more advanced products to Chinese companies. However, the US Minister of Trade Howard Lutnick proposed on Tuesday that the government would continue to enable chips sales to China so that companies on the market on the market are based on American technology.
“The idea is that the Chinese are more able to build their own,” Lutnick told CNBC. “You want to be one step ahead of what you can build so that you keep buying our chips.”
Comments are closed.