China is ‘rejecting’ Nvidia’s H200 chips, outfoxing US strategy, Sacks says

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President Donald Trump said on Dec 8 he would allow shipments of Nvidia’s H200 to China.

US President Donald Trump said on Dec 8 he would allow shipments of Nvidia’s H200 to China.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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WASHINGTON – China has figured out the US strategy for allowing it to buy Nvidia’s H200 and is rejecting the AI chip in favour of domestically developed semiconductors, White House AI czar David Sacks said, citing news reports.

President Donald Trump said on Dec 8 he would

allow shipments of Nvidia’s H200 to China

, part of an administration effort backed by Mr Sacks to challenge Chinese tech champions like Huawei Technologies by bringing American competition to their home market.

On Dec 12, Mr Sacks signalled that he was uncertain about whether that approach would work.

“They’re rejecting our chips,” Mr Sacks said in an interview on Bloomberg Tech, citing an unspecified news article he had seen that day.

“Apparently they don’t want them, and I think the reason for that is they want semiconductor independence.”

Mr Sacks’ comments raise questions about whether Nvidia will be able to recover revenue from China, a data centre market it has removed entirely from its forecasts but that Chief Executive Officer Jensen Huang has put at US$50 billion (S$64.60 billion) in 2025.

Bloomberg Intelligence analysts estimate annual H200 revenue in China to be a US$10 billion opportunity – but only if the nation accepts the US firm’s chips.

In a statement from a spokesperson, Nvidia said it continues to work with the administration on H200 licences for vetted customers.

“While we do not yet have results to report, it’s clear that three years of overbroad export controls fuelled America’s foreign competitors and cost US taxpayers billions of dollars,” the company said.

Mr Liu Pengyu, a Chinese embassy spokesperson, said that cooperation on technology and the economy is in the common interest of China and the US.

“We hope the US will work with China to take concrete actions to maintain the stability and smooth functioning of global supply chains,” he said in a statement.

China is weighing a package of incentives worth as much as US$70 billion to

support its local chipmaking industry

, Bloomberg reported on Dec 12, underscoring Beijing’s resolve to reduce its reliance on foreign chipmakers such as Nvidia.

It suggests the government will continue to support companies like Huawei and Cambricon Technologies even with the H200 cleared by the US for export to China. 

The H200, which was introduced in 2023 and began shipping to customers in 2024, is part of the Hopper generation of Nvidia’s chips, second-best to the Blackwell line and two generations behind the upcoming Rubin series.

An 18-month lag behind the latest Nvidia chips was part of the Trump administration’s justification for the decision.

Mr Sacks, a venture capitalist who joined the administration in January, identified China’s desire to prop up and subsidise Huawei as a key reason for its H200 reluctance.

Even so, he defended the decision to allow China to access H200 chips, which he called a “lagging” technology and no longer state-of-the-art.

“What you see is China’s not taking them because they want to prop up and subsidise Huawei,” Mr Sacks said. “That was part of our calculation, of selling not the best but lagging chips to China, is that you can take market share away from Huawei, but I think the Chinese government has figured that out, and that’s why they’re not allowing them.”

The H200 decision was motivated by an assessment that Huawei – Nvidia’s Chinese archrival – offers AI systems with comparable horsepower, including its Cloud Matrix 384 platform, which links hundreds of processors together to compensate for lower performance in individual chips.

Some US officials saw the H200 as compromise from Nvidia’s earlier push to export a version of the Blackwell chip to China, according to a person familiar with the matter.

Last week, as officials weighed the decision, Mr Huang told reporters in Washington that he had no clue if China would accept H200 chips.

On Dec 8, Mr Trump said in a Truth Social post that President Xi Jinping of China responded positively to the possibility of H200 export approvals. 

Beijing has yet to publicly agree to allow imports of Nvidia’s H200 products. It also has yet to publicly reject them, despite the recent US policy change.

Earlier in 2025, China shunned the H20, a significantly less capable chip Mr Trump allowed this summer. BLOOMBERG

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