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Due to US sanctions, China is now financially insignificant to Nvidia's current earnings, down from a quarter of its business. The strategic danger is not the immediate revenue loss, but that ceding the market allows Chinese domestic competitors to scale and become future global threats.

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China's pause on Nvidia H200 chip orders is not a permanent ban but a strategic move. The government aims to balance its immediate need for advanced AI chips with its long-term goal of fostering a competitive homegrown chip industry, preventing over-reliance on Western technology.

The decision to allow NVIDIA to sell powerful AI chips to China has a counterintuitive goal. The administration believes that by supplying China, it can "take the air out" of the country's own efforts to build a self-sufficient AI chip ecosystem, thereby hindering domestic firms like Huawei.

Allowing H200 chip sales gives China significant AI compute capability. This short-term revenue boost for NVIDIA won't alter China's long-term policy of reducing reliance on foreign tech, effectively helping a competitor in a strategic race.

Despite the U.S. easing export controls, China's government may restrict imports of NVIDIA's advanced chips. Beijing is prioritizing its long-term goal of semiconductor self-sufficiency, which requires creating a protected market for domestic firms like Huawei, even if Chinese tech companies prefer superior foreign hardware.

Restricting sales to China is a catastrophic mistake that creates a protected, trillion-dollar market for domestic rivals like Huawei. This funds their R&D and global expansion with monopoly profits. To win the long-term AI race, American tech must be allowed to compete everywhere.

While NVIDIA laments lost revenue from export controls, those same policies blocked its primary Chinese competitor, Huawei, from accessing TSMC's advanced manufacturing. This prevented Huawei from launching a competing 7nm GPU, preserving NVIDIA's market dominance in China.

The real long-term threat to NVIDIA's dominance may not be a known competitor but a black swan: Huawei. Leveraging non-public lithography and massive state investment, Huawei could surprise the market within 2-3 years by producing high-volume, low-cost, specialized AI chips, fundamentally altering the competitive landscape.

China's refusal to buy NVIDIA's export-compliant H20 chips is a strategic decision, not just a reaction to lower quality. It stems from concerns about embedded backdoors (like remote shutdown) and growing confidence in domestic options like Huawei's Ascend chips, signaling a decisive push for a self-reliant tech stack.

The US ban on selling Nvidia's most advanced AI chips to China backfired. It forced China to accelerate its domestic chip industry, with companies like Huawei now producing competitive alternatives, ultimately reducing China's reliance on American technology.

U.S. chip companies that sell to Chinese tech giants are making a strategic error. They are building a temporary bridge for future competitors who are mandated to switch to domestic suppliers like Huawei once viable. This short-term revenue comes at the cost of shrinking their own long-term global market share.