Jensen Huang says U.S. chip restrictions have cut Nvidia’s China market share nearly in half

Jensen Huang says U.S. chip restrictions have cut Nvidia’s China market share nearly in half


'Jensantity' hits Taiwan as Nvidia CEO visits country

Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang said overnight that U.S. chip export controls are a “failure” and warned that the restrictions are doing more damage to American business than to China.

Huang said in a press conference at Computex, an artificial intelligence exhibition in Taiwan, that the policies have cut the AI chip leader’s China market share from 95% to 50% and motivated Beijing to make its own chips faster.

Huang’s comments came as the truce between the U.S. and China over tariffs and semiconductors continues to be delicate.

The Chinese Commerce Ministry responded to the Trump administration’s recent chip policy change on Monday, calling the U.S. policy “overreaching” and “bullying,” and demanding that the White House “correct its mistakes.”

“The U.S. abuses export control measures, imposing unjustified restrictions on Chinese chip products and even interfering with Chinese companies’ use of domestically produced chips within China,” the ministry said.

The White House scrapped the tiered “AI Diffusion Rule” rolled out by former President Joe Biden in January and promised to fully replace it in the future.

Nvidia is stuck in the middle, with Huang maintaining relationships with both sides in a deepening tech cold war.

In Saudi Arabia last week, President Donald Trump called Huang a “friend” and touted Nvidia’s massive AI investment.

Huang accompanied Trump on the Middle East trip, a prominent representative of the U.S.’s global technology power. But Huang has also kept close ties to China and praised the country’s tech capabilities.

Nvidia is acquiring a new space for its employees in Shanghai, though the company said it is not sending any IP or GPU designs there.

Huang told lawmakers in Washington in April that China is quickly gaining ground on the U.S. in AI.

“China is right behind us,” Huang said. “We are very close. Remember this is a long-term, infinite race.”

He also singled out the capabilities of Huawei, which is reportedly developing its own advanced chip to rival Nvidia.

“They’re incredible in computing and network technology, all these essential capabilities to advance AI,” Huang said. “They have made enormous progress in the last several years.”

Even with the U.S. and China relationship on rocky footing, Huang told senior Chinese officials in April that his company would “unswervingly serve the Chinese market.”

Nvidia’s balancing game continues, reshaping chips to stay compliant and straddling commercial and political fault lines.

Huang’s warning is clear: If the U.S. doesn’t rethink its approach, it could lose the Chinese market and its edge in the global AI race.



Source

Elon Musk’s xAI wants to build a power plant in Mississippi. Regulators plan a key meeting on Election Day
Technology

Elon Musk’s xAI wants to build a power plant in Mississippi. Regulators plan a key meeting on Election Day

Elon Musk waves to the crowd during the 56th annual World Economic Forum (WEF) meeting in Davos, Switzerland, January 22, 2026. Denis Balibouse | Reuters With Elon Musk’s xAI planning to build a massive, natural-gas burning power plant in Southaven, Mississippi, the state’s environmental authority has scheduled a board meeting for Tuesday — Election Day […]

Read More
Top permitting-reform Republican, Democratic senators meeting as talks thaw: API chief
Technology

Top permitting-reform Republican, Democratic senators meeting as talks thaw: API chief

U.S. Sen. Shelley Moore Capito (R-WV) speaks to the media following the weekly policy luncheons at the U.S. Capitol on June 21, 2023 in Washington, DC. Kevin Dietsch | Getty Images Senate Environment and Public Works Committee Chair Shelley Moore Capito and ranking Democrat Sheldon Whitehouse are meeting to discuss reforming the federal energy permitting […]

Read More
OpenAI to buy cybersecurity startup Promptfoo to better safeguard AI agents
Technology

OpenAI to buy cybersecurity startup Promptfoo to better safeguard AI agents

Sam Altman, CEO of OpenAI, at the AI Impact Summit in New Delhi, India, Feb. 19, 2026. Prakash Singh | Bloomberg | Getty Images OpenAI said Monday that it is acquiring the cybersecurity startup Promptfoo, which provides tools to help safeguard and test complex artificial intelligence systems. The Sam Altman-led firm did not disclose the […]

Read More