NVIDIA shares rose 4% on Thursday after the U.S. approved the sale of H200 chips to 10 Chinese companies. While revenue matters, the greater significance is what this means for the future of global AI infrastructure. Analysts see this as a move toward platform dominance, not just chip sales.
A semiconductor analyst at Cantor Fitzgerald called this news a small positive for Nvidia, but said the bigger impact is strategic. By allowing H200 sales, the U.S. is allowing China to build its AI infrastructure using American technology rather than Chinese alternatives. This choice could have major long-term effects on U.S. influence in the global AI race.
These sales have been in the works for a while. Trump approved Nvidia’s H200 chip sales to China last December, but only with national security conditions. Progress slowed because NVIDIA had to meet strict compliance rules, while China encouraged its companies to buy from local chipmakers. According to Nvidia’s February earnings report, the company had not generated any revenue from the H200 program and was still unsure whether any shipments would be allowed into China.
The approved sales also have strict oversight. Every shipment must be checked by the U.S. government, which will also get a 25% share of the sales. Companies reportedly on the license list include Alibaba, Tencent, and Lenovo. None of them responded to requests for comment.
NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang is now in Beijing for a summit with other tech leaders, invited by President Trump. This underscores the event’s diplomatic importance in chip policy this year.