Nvidia says it follows export laws ‘to the letter’ a day after AI chip sales to China stopped

Nvidia says it follows export laws ‘to the letter’ a day after AI chip sales to China stopped


Jensen Huang, co-founder and chief executive officer of Nvidia Corp., during the opening ceremony of the Siliconware Precision Industries Co. (SPIL) Tan Ke Plant in Taichung, Taiwan, on Thursday, Jan. 16, 2025. 

An Rong Xu | Bloomberg | Getty Images

A day after Nvidia revealed it would incur $5.5 billion in costs related to canceled orders for the H20 chip, which the government said this week requires a license to export to China, the company said it abides by rules on where it can sell its artificial intelligence processors.

“The U.S. government instructs American businesses on what they can sell and where — we follow the government’s directions to the letter,” an Nvidia representative said in a statement.

Nvidia said the statement was in response to a House Select Committee focused on national security threats from China, which opened an investigation into Nvidia’s sales on Wednesday. The H20 was introduced by Nvidia after the Biden administration restricted AI chip exports in 2022. It’s a slowed-down version intended to comply with U.S. export controls.

Nvidia’s brief comment is an indication of how the company is going to defend its business in Washington, D.C., as its technology draws increased scrutiny related to national defense and security. The company’s stock price tumbled almost 7% on Wednesday.

Nvidia’s chips have the vast majority of the market for AI applications, and some were used by China’s DeepSeek to build R1, which upended markets in January.

On Wednesday, the chipmaker touted the taxes it paid, its U.S.-based workforce, and its role as a technology leader.

The company’s exports even help the U.S. fix its trade deficit, the statement said, directly addressing President Trump’s stated reason for introducing tariffs earlier this month.

Trump chip ban hits Nvidia: Why Huawei is set reap the benefits

“NVIDIA protects and enhances national security by creating U.S. jobs and infrastructure, promoting U.S. technology leadership, bringing billions of dollars of tax revenue to the U.S. treasury, and alleviating the massive U.S. trade deficit,” according to the statement.

One challenge for Nvidia is that the H20 was legal for export to China until last week, under previous Biden administration rules. But the House Select Committee said on Wednesday the sale of H20 chips for the past year was effectively a “loophole.”

“The technology industry supports America when it exports to well-known companies worldwide – if the government felt otherwise, it would instruct us,” Nvidia said in its statement.

The government is also investigating whether shipments of restricted chips to China went through Singapore, Nvidia’s second-largest market by billing address with just under $24 billion in sales in the company’s past fiscal year, according to filings.

Nvidia clarified on Wednesday that its Singapore revenue indicates sales with a billing address in the country, often for subsidiaries of U.S. customers.

“The associated products are shipped to other locations, including the United States and Taiwan, not to China,” Nvidia said.

In addition to Chinese export controls and the congressional investigation, Nvidia also faces additional restrictions on what it can export starting next month, under “AI diffusion rules” first proposed by the Biden administration.

WATCH: Nvidia’s $5.5 billion hit may prove the AI digestion phase is here

Nvidia's $5.5B hit may prove the AI digestion phase is here, says Niles Investment's Dan Niles



Source

Corning CEO to Cramer: Deals with 2 unnamed hyperscalers ‘larger’ than B Meta pact
Technology

Corning CEO to Cramer: Deals with 2 unnamed hyperscalers ‘larger’ than $6B Meta pact

The investment story for Corning looks even sweeter in the wake of Jim Cramer’s sit-down with CEO Wendell Weeks on “Mad Money” on Thursday night. One day after Corning’s blockbuster optical partnership with Nvidia , Weeks shed some more light on the company’s new supply agreements with two unnamed hyperscalers. Corning first disclosed these along […]

Read More
Jim Cramer says the AI boom has ‘the power to keep the country’s economy humming’
Technology

Jim Cramer says the AI boom has ‘the power to keep the country’s economy humming’

CNBC’s Jim Cramer said that he’s not worried about the market taking a breather because the artificial intelligence boom remains powerful enough to keep driving stocks higher. All three major indexes closed lower Thursday after the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite and S&P 500 hit intraday highs earlier in the session. The Dow Jones Industrial Average shed […]

Read More
Nvidia CEO says AI partnership with Corning will ‘revitalize American manufacturing’
Technology

Nvidia CEO says AI partnership with Corning will ‘revitalize American manufacturing’

Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang told CNBC’s Jim Cramer that the company’s new partnership with Corning represents an important opportunity to rebuild critical parts of the technology supply chain in the United States. “We’re going through the single largest infrastructure buildout in human history,” Huang said “Mad Money” on Wednesday. “Artificial intelligence is going to become […]

Read More