A Stunning Admission From Silicon Valley’s AI King
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang has delivered one of his most candid assessments yet of the impact of U.S. trade restrictions, revealing that the chipmaker’s once-dominant position in China has all but evaporated.
Speaking at an investor conference this week, Huang said Nvidia’s market share in China has fallen from 95% to nearly zero following a series of U.S. export controls that blocked advanced GPU shipments to Chinese customers.
“I can’t imagine any policymaker thinking that that’s a good idea,” Huang said, his tone equal parts frustration and disbelief. “We’ve effectively handed one of the largest markets in the world to our competitors.”
Export Controls Hit Nvidia’s Core Business
The U.S. government’s tightening export rules, designed to limit China’s access to high-end semiconductors used in artificial intelligence and supercomputing, have severely constrained Nvidia’s ability to sell its flagship A100 and H100 GPUs, the most sought-after chips in global AI development.
The restrictions, first introduced in 2022 and expanded several times since, now cover almost all Nvidia data center GPUs capable of advanced training workloads.
“China represented up to 25% of Nvidia’s data center revenue,” said Patrick Moorhead, analyst at Moor Insights & Strategy. “Losing that overnight is a shock to any company, even one as strong as Nvidia.”
To comply with the rules, Nvidia launched “downgraded” export variants of its chips, such as the A800 and H800, but even those have since been banned under newer regulations.
Huang’s Warning: Policy Could Backfire
Huang’s comments reflect a growing unease in Silicon Valley that U.S. export restrictions may backfire, accelerating China’s domestic semiconductor ambitions instead of slowing them.
“What we’ve done,” Huang argued, “is force Chinese firms to double down on self-reliance. They’ll catch up faster, not slower.”
Industry analysts agree. China’s state-backed chipmaker Huawei has made breakthroughs with its Ascend AI processors, and startups like Birentech are racing to fill the void left by Nvidia.
“If the goal was to preserve America’s leadership,” said Moorhead, “you don’t achieve it by cutting yourself off from 20% of the demand curve.”
China’s AI Boom Continues Without Nvidia
Despite Washington’s restrictions, China’s AI industry continues to grow rapidly. Local firms such as Baidu, Tencent, and Alibaba have pivoted to domestic hardware solutions, while government funding accelerates chip independence programs.
“China’s not standing still,” said Chris Miller, author of Chip War. “They’re replicating Nvidia’s model, hardware, software, and ecosystem, and doing it with national-level urgency.”
Meanwhile, Chinese firms are buying up older-generation GPUs and gray-market alternatives, ensuring their AI projects remain operational even under embargo.
Wall Street’s View: A Political Trade-Off
Nvidia remains a trillion-dollar company, but the China fallout represents a rare loss of momentum. The firm’s stock dipped 3% intraday following Huang’s remarks, as investors reassessed the long-term consequences of losing access to the world’s largest semiconductor import market.
Still, many analysts note that Nvidia’s growth in the U.S., Europe, and Middle East has more than offset short-term pain. Orders from cloud giants like Microsoft, Amazon, and Google remain at record highs.
“This isn’t an existential threat,” said Dan Ives of Wedbush Securities. “It’s a geopolitical reset. The concern is more about precedent, how much political risk Silicon Valley can really absorb.”
A Balancing Act Between Washington and Wall Street
For Huang, the challenge now lies in navigating between two worlds: U.S. policymakers determined to control technology exports, and investors demanding growth in a globalized market.
Nvidia has reportedly increased lobbying efforts in Washington, urging officials to consider nuanced licensing frameworks rather than blanket bans.
“It’s not about opposing national security,” Huang clarified. “It’s about ensuring that the policies we make actually achieve their goals, instead of weakening the very companies that drive innovation.”
A Broader Semiconductor Shockwave
The impact extends far beyond Nvidia. AMD, Intel, and even ASML have faced similar restrictions, squeezing global supply chains and fracturing decades of cross-border chip collaboration.
“This is the semiconductor decoupling era,” said Miller. “Every policy decision now carries trillion-dollar consequences.”
China, for its part, has imposed countermeasures, including export restrictions on gallium and germanium, two materials vital to chip production. The tit-for-tat escalation underscores a new phase of tech nationalism that could reshape the entire AI race.
Huang’s Philosophy: Innovation Should Be Global
Huang, who was born in Taiwan and raised in the U.S., has long described technology as “a bridge between worlds.” His comments this week suggest deep concern that those bridges are being torn down.
“Technology thrives when talent and markets connect,” he said. “When we wall off parts of the world, we slow down progress, and everyone pays the price.”
Despite the setback in China, Nvidia continues to dominate the AI chip market globally, with an estimated 80% market share outside the PRC. But Huang’s warning carries weight: if trade barriers continue to harden, innovation itself may become collateral damage.