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Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang Says No Plans to Sell Blackwell AI Chips to China

Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang said on Friday that there are “no active discussions” about selling the company’s cutting-edge Blackwell AI chips to China, pushing back on speculation that a U.S.–China deal could soon allow limited exports.

The Blackwell processor, Nvidia’s most powerful chip for artificial intelligence applications, is currently banned from sale in China under U.S. export restrictions introduced by the Trump administration. Washington fears the hardware could accelerate Beijing’s military and AI capabilities.

“There are no plans to ship anything to China right now,” Huang told reporters during a visit to Tainan, Taiwan, where he attended a TSMC company event. “It’s up to China when they would like Nvidia products to go back to serve the Chinese market,” he added, implying that Beijing’s own policies are a barrier to reentry.

Rumors of a possible diplomatic breakthrough emerged last week when U.S. President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping met in South Korea, but no agreement has materialized.

Nvidia is still allowed to sell its H20 chips, a downgraded model tailored for the Chinese market, but Huang said China’s stance has left Nvidia’s market share for advanced AI chips at zero.

Asked about Tesla CEO Elon Musk’s plan to build a semiconductor fabrication plant, Huang noted that “building advanced manufacturing like TSMC does is extremely hard,” but added that demand for such technology remains enormous.

Huang also clarified remarks reported by the Financial Times, denying that he had said China would win the AI race. “What I said was that China has very good AI technology,” he explained. “They have many AI researchers. The United States just has to move very, very fast because the world is competitive.”

The comments underscore Nvidia’s delicate position between U.S. export controls and China’s growing AI ecosystem, even as global demand for its chips remains red-hot.

Nexperia Warns It Cannot Guarantee Quality of China-Made Chips After October 13

Dutch semiconductor manufacturer Nexperia said it expects to resolve the ongoing crisis over control of the company but cautioned customers that chips produced in China after October 13 may not meet its quality or authenticity standards.

The warning follows a turbulent period for the firm, which saw the Dutch government seize control of Nexperia on September 30 amid national security concerns, and China respond by blocking chip exports on October 4. The resulting standoff has disrupted supply chains for automakers and electronics manufacturers that rely on Nexperia’s components.

The company said its operations outside China — including facilities in Europe, Malaysia, and the Philippines — remain unaffected and are functioning normally.

In a statement, Nexperia welcomed assurances that, under a new U.S.-China agreement, it will be exempt from American export restrictions for one year. Beijing has also said it will allow exports on a “case-by-case” basis.

Nexperia’s Chinese parent company, Wingtech Technology, remains under U.S. restrictions, and its founder Zhang Xuezheng was suspended as Nexperia CEO by a Dutch court on October 7, contrary to earlier reports suggesting he retained control.

While most of Nexperia’s chips are manufactured in Europe, about 70% are packaged and distributed in China, where the local unit has declared operational independence and claims to have sufficient inventory to meet demand through 2025.

The Dutch firm said it remains committed to maintaining its Chinese operations while seeking alternative packaging and supply solutions to ensure “product availability in a sustainable manner.”

Synopsys Shares Plunge 35% on China Woes, Erasing 2025 Gains

Synopsys shares tumbled nearly 35% on Wednesday, putting the chip design software giant on track for its worst single-day drop on record and wiping out gains accumulated in 2025. The decline followed disappointing earnings and fresh concerns about its business in China, a key semiconductor market under tightening U.S. export restrictions.

The company reported Q3 revenue of $1.74 billion, missing analyst estimates, with weakness in its IP segment. CEO Sassine Ghazi blamed U.S. export curbs — which blocked sales of chip design software to China for more than a month — and setbacks at a “major foundry customer.” Although restrictions were lifted in July, analysts said Chinese customer confidence has eroded, leaving demand subdued.

Synopsys generates more than 10% of industry revenue from China, but geopolitical tensions have made that stream increasingly fragile. Shares of rival Cadence Design Systems also dropped nearly 7% in sympathy.

While Ghazi did not identify the foundry customer, analysts pointed to Intel, which has dramatically scaled back its 18A chip manufacturing technology and broader foundry ambitions. J.P. Morgan suggested Synopsys had dedicated significant IP resources to Intel’s program, only to see its potential curtailed.

The downturn comes as Synopsys completes its $35 billion acquisition of Ansys, a move aimed at diversifying its engineering software portfolio. However, the company also announced it will cut 10% of its workforce by 2026 as part of a strategic review.

With trade restrictions clouding its China outlook and reliance on slowing customers like Intel, Synopsys faces mounting pressure to stabilize its core business even as it integrates Ansys.