China, NVIDIA and AI
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(Reuters) -Nvidia has told its Chinese customers it has limited supplies of H20 chips, the most powerful AI chip it had been allowed to sell to China under U.S. export restrictions, and that it doesn't plan to restart production, The Information reported on Saturday.
At the Beijing Expo, Jensen Huang also announced plans for a new chip for Chinese clients that is designed for robotics and smart factories.
Nvidia's AI chip sales in China boost near-term outlook, but geopolitical risks cast doubts on long-term growth. Click to read more on NVDA's Hold rating.
Anita Ramaswamy, columnist at The Information, joins Marketplace’s Meghan McCarty Carino for “Tech Bytes: Week in Review.”
Gil Luria from D.A. Davidson discusses the national security concerns around the report that U.S. officials are delaying a deal for the UAE's purchase of Nvidia AI chips.
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24/7 Wall St. on MSNU.S. Reverses Nvidia AI Export Ban as China’s DeepSeek Closes AI Gap at Fraction of U.S. CostsBack in April, the U.S. government banned Nvidia’s H20 AI exports to China. As of July 15, the government has reversed its decision. The company is now legally allowed to file for export licenses. This change comes after the crucial London meeting between Chinese and U.
Nvidia Corp. boss Jensen Huang lauded DeepSeek and China’s other contributions to AI research as he met with political and tech leaders in Beijing.
BEIJING/SHANGHAI (Reuters) -Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang described artificial intelligence models from Chinese firms Deepseek, Alibaba and Tencent as "world class" and said AI was "revolutionising" supply chains,