Essayer OR - Gratuit
With billions at risk, Nvidia's CEO buys his way out of the trade battle
Mint Mumbai
|August 13, 2025
Jensen Huang told Trump that restrictions on U.S. chip sales to China would backfire by pushing Chinese technology champions to achieve self-reliance
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.
Cette histoire est tirée de l'édition August 13, 2025 de Mint Mumbai.
Abonnez-vous à Magzter GOLD pour accéder à des milliers d'histoires premium sélectionnées et à plus de 9 000 magazines et journaux.
Déjà abonné ? Se connecter
PLUS D'HISTOIRES DE Mint Mumbai
Mint Mumbai
'India needs more high-quality artworks'
India’s art market is entering a phase where finding works of art is harder than finding buyers.
2 mins
April 30, 2026
Mint Mumbai
Trump tells aides to prepare for extended blockade of Iran
Trump prefers decisive victories, but none of the options offers a swift exit from the conflict
4 mins
April 30, 2026
Mint Mumbai
The 0.01 trap: India's GDP must not remain aloof from its people
We face a structural crisis in the collapse of formal job elasticity. Rapid economic growth must spell better lives for everyone
4 mins
April 30, 2026
Mint Mumbai
State paternalism has limits that should not be blurred
In 1604, James I of England anonymously published a small book titled A Counter-blaste to Tobacco.
3 mins
April 30, 2026
Mint Mumbai
Will this oil shock force India into export-orientation?
The International Monetary Fund in its recent spring meeting abandoned its single global growth forecast.
3 mins
April 30, 2026
Mint Mumbai
Centre plans ring roads, elevated corridors to unclog urban India
The Union road transport and highways ministry is recalibrating its highbuilding strategy to focus on decongesting urban India, with plans to prioritize ring roads and bypass corridors around nearly 50 cities with populations exceeding one million, two people aware of the development said.
2 mins
April 30, 2026
Mint Mumbai
Images of a city in perpetual motion
An ongoing exhibition of Raghubir Singh's photographs from the 1970s-90s captures the changing nature of life in Mumbai
4 mins
April 30, 2026
Mint Mumbai
Why is AI wonder Mythos making regulators edgy?
Anthropic's Mythos, a frontier artificial intelligence (AI) model, can outperform humans in detecting vulnerabilities across banks, telcos and utilities.
2 mins
April 30, 2026
Mint Mumbai
Irdai to tweak rules to curb insurance mis-selling
India's insurance regulator is planning a sweeping overhaul of how policies are sold, including tighter scrutiny of banks and a discussion paper on distribution reforms, as it looks to curb mis-selling and high costs in the sector.
3 mins
April 30, 2026
Mint Mumbai
Vedanta FY26 earnings tops estimates ahead of its split
Vedanta reported FY26 revenue of ₹1.74 trillion, up 15.8% year-on-year, beating estimates
3 mins
April 30, 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size

