NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang has a 'complaint'
Digest more
By Karen Freifeld (Reuters) -A leading Republican voice in Congress on China policy said on Wednesday that selling Nvidia's best AI chip to China "would be akin (to) giving Iran weapons grade uranium",
CNBC's Arjun Kharpal breaks down the latest commentary from U.S. President Donald Trump around Nvidia's access to the China market.
President Donald Trump signaled reluctance to share Nvidia’s Blackwell chips with China. Following a meeting in South Korea on Thursday, Trump told reporters aboard Air Force One that semiconductors had been discussed and that China would be “talking to Nvidia and others about taking chips,” but added, “We’re not talking about the Blackwell.”
Mr Trump said he and Mr Xi talked about Nvidia’s access to China in general. Read more at straitstimes.com. Read more at straitstimes.com.
US President Donald Trump said he didn’t discuss approving sales of Nvidia Corp.’s Blackwell chips to China with his counterpart Xi Jinping, dampening speculation that Washington will
Speaking to reporters aboard Air Force One en route to Gyeongju, South Korea, Trump praised Nvidia's Blackwell as the "super-duper chip" and said he might speak to Xi about them, without elaborating.
Nvidia sees $500B in GPU sales by 2026, excluding China. Analysts forecast higher growth and raised price targets.
At the company’s annual developers confab, Huang mentioned several times that half of the world’s AI researchers come from China.
U.S. President Donald Trump may have teased that he could discuss Nvidia's state-of-the-art artificial intelligence Blackwell chips with Chinese President Xi Jinping, but in the end, he said the topic did not come up.
Donald Trump and China’s leader, Xi Jinping, have agreed to a one-year pause on the punitive Trump-instated tariffs that are at the heart of the ongoing trade war between the two superpowers. Among the issues discussed when the two leaders met face-to-face in the South Korean city of Busan were China’s chokehold on rare earth metals and the export restrictions on NVIDIA’s AI chips.