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The semiconductor rally defies the energy crisis that should constrain AI. This suggests the market may be pricing in a deal where the US grants China access to high-end chips in exchange for China's help in resolving the Iran conflict and curbing inflation.

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Beijing's unclear stance on Nvidia H200 chip imports is a strategic negotiation tactic, not a definitive ban. This ambiguity creates leverage to extract concessions from the U.S. in trade talks, using the tech sector as a pawn in a larger geopolitical game.

The brazen smuggling of NVIDIA chips to China signals that the competition for AI dominance is an "all-out sprint" and a matter of national security. Control over compute infrastructure is now as geopolitically critical as energy, making it the central battleground of a new technological Cold War.

Former White House advisor Ben Buchanan argues that contrary to the popular phrase "data is the new oil," computing power is the true bottleneck and driver of AI progress. This physical reality—advanced chips primarily made by democracies—creates a powerful geopolitical lever to influence nations like China.

Banning chip sales to China reduces its reliance on Taiwan's TSMC, lowering the economic cost of an invasion. Resuming sales re-establishes this crucial economic link, creating a powerful disincentive for conflict and acting as a geopolitical stabilizer, despite seeming counterintuitive to gaining a direct AI advantage.

Current geopolitical strategies are aimed at securing cheap, abundant energy. This is not for traditional consumption but to fuel the immense power demands of the AI arms race between the US and China. Lowering energy costs is the primary lever to accelerate intelligence creation and gain a competitive edge.

The central geopolitical and economic conflict of the modern era revolves around the control of semiconductor chips and fabrication plants (fabs). These have surpassed oil as the most critical strategic resource, dictating technological and military superiority.

Silver Lake's Glenn Hutchins argues the US ban on advanced GPUs is not just a hindrance to China. It's forcing them to innovate, become more efficient ("do more with less"), and accelerate their domestic semiconductor industry, potentially making them stronger and more competitive in the long run.

The US is allowing Nvidia to sell advanced chips to China again. The strategic calculus has shifted from simple resource hoarding to geopolitics: keeping China dependent on Taiwan's TSMC makes an invasion less likely, as it would destroy the very supply chain China needs for its AI ambitions.

Contrary to advocating for a full embargo, Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang argues that selling advanced chips to China is strategically advantageous for the US. His thesis is that creating technological dependency on American hardware is a more powerful long-term lever than allowing China to become self-sufficient with domestic champions.

Intel's recovery isn't just a market story. The US government's investment and push for domestic chip manufacturing (to mitigate Taiwan risk) create a powerful, non-economic tailwind. This government backing effectively de-risks Intel's capital-intensive foundry expansion by signaling guaranteed demand from national security interests.

Semiconductor Rally May Signal a Looming US-China Grand Bargain | RiffOn