Nvidia got what it needed from Washington. The company received approval to export its H200 AI chip to China under certain conditions. But there’s a problem. The chip can’t actually enter the country.
NVIDIA Corporation, NVDA
Chinese customs authorities have told agents the H200 is not allowed in. This flips the usual script on chip export disputes. Normally, U.S. restrictions are the bottleneck. This time, Beijing is the one putting up walls.
The situation puts companies like Inventec in a tough spot. The Taiwanese manufacturer builds AI servers using Nvidia chips for Chinese clients. Their Shanghai factory handles most of this production. Now those operations are stuck in neutral.
Tsai pointed to politics as the deciding factor. The technical approval from the U.S. doesn’t matter if China refuses entry. It’s a policy call, not a supply issue.
The H200 ranks as Nvidia’s second-most-powerful AI chip. It handles large-scale data processing and AI training workloads. Chinese companies see it as crucial for closing AI development gaps with Western competitors.
Beijing’s intentions remain murky. China could ban the chip completely to protect domestic semiconductor companies. The government might still be reviewing U.S. export restrictions before deciding. Or this could be a negotiating tool in broader trade discussions with Washington.
For Nvidia investors, it adds uncertainty to China revenue. The company cleared the U.S. hurdle but the final decision sits with Chinese officials. Shares closed at $186.23 Friday, down 0.44%.
Wall Street analysts haven’t backed off. The stock carries a Strong Buy consensus rating. The average price target sits at $263.44, implying 41.46% upside from current levels.
This reversal matters because it changes who controls the narrative. Export restrictions usually flow from Washington. Now Beijing holds the cards. Inventec and other manufacturers will keep orders paused while they wait for clarity.
Nobody knows when China will decide. The standoff leaves Nvidia’s second-most-powerful chip in regulatory limbo. U.S. approval means nothing without Chinese clearance. Inventec can’t ship products. Chinese customers can’t receive orders. Everyone waits.
The H200 situation highlights how chip exports have become tools in geopolitical chess matches. Technical capabilities matter less than political willingness. Until China makes its position clear, the chips stay out and the orders stay frozen.
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