In latest trade warning to US, China says Nvidia violated anti-monopoly law
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China in December launched an investigation into Nvidia over what it said were suspected violations of the country’s anti-monopoly law.
PHOTO: REUTERS
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BEIJING - China on Sept 15 accused Nvidia of violating the country’s anti-monopoly law, the latest escalation in its trade war with the United States that has claimed the chipmaker as collateral damage.
The statement from China’s market regulator was made after what it said was a preliminary probe into Nvidia’s business practices, and comes as the two countries hold trade talks
US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent called the announcement from China’s State Administration for Market Regulation “poor timing,” a move analysts said gave China leverage in the trade talks.
The two countries have traded barbs over the past six months since US President Donald Trump hit China with massive tariffs, before lowering them to 30 per cent, and threatened to shut down popular social media app TikTok.
China has responded with 10 per cent tariffs and antitrust probes against the likes of Alphabet’s Google, signalling more regulatory scrutiny on US firms.
“It’s a warning that if the US export control paradigm operates in the same way as in the past several years there will be consequences, and China is willing to inflict damage on US companies,” said Mr Zhengyuan Bo, partner at research company Plenum.
He added that SAMR’s preliminary ruling was likely a counter to the Trump administration’s decision on Sept 12 to place 23 Chinese companies on a US trade blacklist.
China’s announcement piles on more uncertainty for Nvidia’s business in China, which in 2024 accounted for 13 per cent of its total sales.
It shows that CEO Jensen Huang’s charm offensive in China is not enough. Mr Huang visited the country three times in 2025 to signal his commitment to the Chinese market, and has said that selling AI technology to that country is key to the United States’ ambitions to be a leader in the business.
Despite big demand from Chinese tech firms including Tencent and TikTok parent ByteDance for Nvidia’s chips that are needed to build out infrastructure for soaring AI workloads, Reuters has reported that China has discouraged the firms from such purchases as it tries to wean itself off US technology.
Beijing in August also asked Nvidia to explain whether its H20 chip, made specifically for the Chinese market, posed backdoor security risks that could affect Chinese user data and privacy.
Even after the US authorised export licenses allowing Nvidia to sell H20 chips in exchange for 15 per cent of its sales in the country, the chipmaker has not sent any H20 chips to China because the US has yet to come up with rules on how to get the payment.
The uncertainty over the China business has pressured Nvidia stock, which fell 2 per cent on Sept 15 before paring losses.
Nvidia said in a statement that it was complying with the law and would “continue to cooperate with all relevant government agencies as they evaluate the impact of export controls on competition in the commercial markets.”
The company declined to comment further on where it stood with the US government on paying the 15 per cent share of its China revenue.
The US Department of Commerce and the White House did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
Separately, Mr Bessent said on Sept 15 that the two countries have reached a framework
Mellanox makes Nvidia more competitive
The brief statement by China’s State Administration for Market Regulation on Sept 15 did not elaborate on how Nvidia might have violated China’s anti-monopoly laws, according to which companies can face fines of between 1 per cent and 10 per cent of their annual sales from the previous year.
Five years ago, China had approved Nvidia’s deal to buy Israel’s Mellanox Technologies with the condition that Nvidia would continue to supply the Chinese market with high-tech GPU chips. But the company was forced to end sales of its most advanced chips due to export controls implemented by the administration of former President Joe Biden.
The SAMR on Sept 15 added that it would continue its investigations.
Mellanox makes high-speed networking equipment for data centers and Nvidia bundles them with its chips to offer advanced cloud-computing products.
“The real concern is the potential for China to impose new measures restricting Nvidia’s ability to sell networking solutions to Chinese customers,” said Mr Ray Wang, lead semiconductor analyst at Futurum Group.
“This business is worth billions of dollars annually and continues to grow alongside rising demand for networking in data centres.”
Mr Wang added that the Mellanox gear played a “very important role, second to CUDA”, Nvidia’s computing platform, in allowing the firm to provide the best networking technology in the world.
Mr Lian Jye Su, chief analyst at consultancy Omdia, said Nvidia could be required to sell chips in China unaccompanied by Mellanox’s technology.
Still, an unfavourable ruling for Nvidia on the antitrust probe was unlikely to affect Nvidia’s bottom line as much as China’s efforts to foster domestic substitutes to the US chipmaker’s most powerful AI chips, Plenum’s Bo said.
“This should not be taken as a sign that China is trying to kick Nvidia out of the country,” he said. REUTERS

