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With billions at risk, Nvidia's CEO buys his way out of the trade battle

August 13, 2025

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Mint Hyderabad

Jensen Huang told Trump that restrictions on U.S. chip sales to China would backfire by pushing Chinese technology champions to achieve self-reliance

- Lingling Wei, Raffaele Huang & Amrith Ramkumar

Jensen Huang, chief executive of California-based chip designer Nvidia, worked for months behind the scenes in Washington and Beijing to protect tens of billions of dollars in future sales from the heated U.S.-China trade rivalry.

Huang told President Trump that restrictions on U.S. chip sales to China would backfire by pushing Chinese technology champions to achieve self-reliance. He advised the president to keep China hooked on American tech. As a sweetener, Huang said the company would invest as much $500 billion in the U.S.

Huang's argument, along with the half-trillion-dollar offer from the world's most valuable company, appeared to seal the deal.

The Trump administration decided last month to allow China to buy Nvidia's H20 artificial-intelligence chip, a surprising reversal that came shortly after Huang met with Trump. Nvidia had developed the H20 to comply with past export restrictions as a less powerful chip specially designed for China. The news sent Nvidia's stock up 4%, pushing its market capitalization further above the record $4 trillion mark.

Beijing reciprocated by allowing a $35 billion deal involving U.S. chip-software makers that it had held up for about a year. In a previously unreported development, Chinese officials also froze an inquiry into an already-completed Nvidia deal. With both moves, China's leaders hoped Huang would keep lobbying Washington for loosened export controls.

There was one last hitch.

At a meeting with Huang in the White House last week, Trump made one more demand—that Nvidia give the federal government 20% of its chip sales to China in exchange for issuing the export licenses. "If I'm going to do that, I want you to pay us something," Trump said, recounting the exchange at a news conference Monday.

The unusual pay-to-play proposal, which hadn't been vetted by White House tech policy staff before Trump offered it, is expected to face legal and security questions.

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