China Rejects Nvidia’s H200 Chips, Outfoxing U.S. Export Gambit
White House AI czar David Sacks stated that the H200 is rejecting the AI chip in favor of domestically produced semiconductors.
Quick overview
- China has deciphered the US strategy allowing it to purchase Nvidia's H200 chips, which the White House AI czar David Sacks claims are being rejected in favor of domestic semiconductors.
- President Trump announced that shipments of Nvidia's H200 to China would be permitted to foster competition against Chinese tech giants like Huawei.
- Sacks expressed uncertainty about the success of this strategy, noting that China may restrict access to these chips through a local approval process.
- Nvidia is still working with the government on H200 licenses for approved clients, while analysts project potential annual revenue of $10 billion from China if the chips are accepted.
China has deciphered the US strategy that permits it to purchase Nvidia. White House AI czar David Sacks stated that the H200 is rejecting the AI chip in favor of domestically produced semiconductors.

“They’re rejecting our chips,” citing an unidentified news story he had seen that day. They don’t seem to want them, and I believe that’s because they want semiconductor independence. Sacks stated that he was alluding to a Financial Times article that claimed China was about to restrict access to the chips through a local approval process in which Chinese buyers would have to defend their purchases.
Sacks’ remarks raise concerns about Nvidia’s ability to recoup revenue from China, a data center market that it has completely excluded from its projections but that CEO Jensen Huang has estimated to be worth $50 billion this year.
Analysts at Bloomberg Intelligence project that China could generate $10 billion in H200 revenue annually, but only if the country accepts the US company’s chips.
Nvidia stated in a press release that it is still collaborating with the government on H200 licenses for approved clients. The company stated, “While we do not yet have results to report, it’s clear that three years of overbroad export controls fueled America’s foreign competitors and cost US taxpayers billions of dollars.”
- Check out our free forex signals
- Follow the top economic events on FX Leaders economic calendar
- Trade better, discover more Forex Trading Strategies
- Open a FREE Trading Account