Nvidia CEO disappointed after reports China has banned its AI chips

Jensen Huang, NVIDIA CEO, organizes a Blackwell GeForce 50 series GPU (L) and RTX 5000 laptops on January 6, 2025 at the Consumer Electrons Fair in Nevada (CES) in Nevada.
Patrick T. Fallon | AFP | Getty Images
London – Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang hosted the US technology giant’s struggles in China after claiming that a report banned the country’s artificial intelligence chips.
Huang said that on Wednesday, the Financial Times had “disappointed” after saying that China’s cyber space management ordered that companies such as Tiktok Ana Company Bandnce and Alibaba not to buy RTX Pro 6000D, a chip for the country.
In response to a question in the FT report, Huang said on Wednesday that “we can serve a market if he just wants to be a country,” he said.
“We probably contributed more to the Chinese market than most countries. And I was disappointed.” He said. “But they have greater agenda between China and the US to exercise, and I understand it.”
Huang comes for a few years later for Nvidia’s work in China, which Huang describes a little roles coaster “.
Huang said to journalists on Wednesday in a press briefing in London, “We have directed all financial analysts not to include China,” he said. “The reason for this is that this is largely in the debate of the United States and the Chinese Government.”
Previously, the US had restricted restrictions on the export of Nvidia’s AI chips to China – including a less powerful server chip called H20 – through national security concerns.
However, in August, the White House announced that President Donald Trump and Huang made an agreement that Nvidia will receive an export license for 15% of the sales of the US government to the US government.
The latest news represents another blow to Nvidia’s Chinese business on Wednesday. At the beginning of this week, China’s market regulation launched an anti -Monopoly investigation against NVIDIA to acquire Mellanox, an Israeli technology company that creates network solutions for state administration, data centers and servers.
Huang accompanies Trump during his state visit to England this week.
On Tuesday, Nvidia announced an £ 11 billion ($ 15 billion) investment in the UK AI infrastructure. And it was not alone – a lot of other US technology giants Microsoft– Google And SalesforceHe also announced billions of dollars of AI investments in the country.
Regardless of the current geopolitical situation, Huang stressed the importance of China’s artificial intelligence.
Nvidia boss, “The Chinese market is important. Great. Technology industry live. We have been in service for 30 years.” He said.
“We will continue to support the Chinese government and Chinese companies as they wish, and of course we will continue to support the US government through these geopolitical policies.”




