Wednesday, April 16th 2025

US Bans Export of NVIDIA H20 Accelerators to China, a Potential $5.5 Billion Loss for NVIDIA
President Trump's administration has announced that NVIDIA's H20 AI chip will require a special export license for any shipment to China, Hong Kong, or Macau for the indefinite future. The Commerce Department delivered the news to NVIDIA on April 14, 2025, citing worries that the H20 could be redirected into Chinese supercomputers with potential military applications. NVIDIA designed the H20 specifically to comply with earlier US curbs by scaling back performance from its flagship H100 model. The H20 features 96 GB of HBM3 memory running at up to 4.0 TB/s, delivers roughly 296 TeraFLOPS of mixed‑precision compute power, and offers a performance density of about 2.9 TeraFLOPS per die. Its single‑precision (FP32) throughput is around 74 TeraFLOPS, with FP16 performance reaching approximately 148 TeraFLOPS. In a regulatory filing on April 15, NVIDIA warned that it will record about $5.5 billion in writedowns this quarter related to H20 inventory and purchase commitments now blocked by the license requirement.
Shares of NVIDIA fell roughly 6 percent in after‑hours trading on April 15, triggering a wider sell‑off in semiconductor stocks from the US to Japan. South Korea's Samsung and SK Hynix each slid about 3 percent, while AMD also dropped on concerns about broader chip‑export curbs. Analysts at Bloomberg Intelligence project that, if the restrictions persist, NVIDIA's China‑related data center revenue could shrink to low‑ or mid‑single digits as a percentage of total sales, down from roughly 13 percent in fiscal 2024. Chinese AI players such as Huawei stand to gain as customers seek alternative inference accelerators. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick has pledged to maintain a tough stance on chip exports to China even as NVIDIA commits up to $500 billion in US AI infrastructure investments over the next four years. Everyone is now watching closely to see whether any H20 export licenses are approved and how long the ban might remain in place.
Sources:
Bloomberg, Reuters
Shares of NVIDIA fell roughly 6 percent in after‑hours trading on April 15, triggering a wider sell‑off in semiconductor stocks from the US to Japan. South Korea's Samsung and SK Hynix each slid about 3 percent, while AMD also dropped on concerns about broader chip‑export curbs. Analysts at Bloomberg Intelligence project that, if the restrictions persist, NVIDIA's China‑related data center revenue could shrink to low‑ or mid‑single digits as a percentage of total sales, down from roughly 13 percent in fiscal 2024. Chinese AI players such as Huawei stand to gain as customers seek alternative inference accelerators. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick has pledged to maintain a tough stance on chip exports to China even as NVIDIA commits up to $500 billion in US AI infrastructure investments over the next four years. Everyone is now watching closely to see whether any H20 export licenses are approved and how long the ban might remain in place.
28 Comments on US Bans Export of NVIDIA H20 Accelerators to China, a Potential $5.5 Billion Loss for NVIDIA
Folks vastly underestimate the power of A.I and how it can be used/misused by an enemy undermine a nation with catastrophic consequences, from deep-fakes, to automated narratives to shape peoples minds/views. There are many impressionable people out there that can't tell the difference between truth and the lies anymore. A Matrix, if you will.
No insults. No trolling. No patriotic nation bashing.
Reply with intelligence, actual facts, or queries that are worth civil discussion.
Be thankful that it's actually still a person, and not automated A.I, then again, if that persons mind was already shaped by a said A.I, does it matter? mmm, yeah, anyway. Something to think about. ;)
And now the export controls are back in place?
My guess is that Jacket Man might have to cancel, or at least delay, his upcoming new jacket order for a little while, until they can jack up the prices of their consumer-level cards some more, hahahaha :D
Does US really thinks those bans actually work?? :laugh: :laugh: :laugh:
Yeah I have trouble keeping up too, but it was. Which didn't pan out, throwing everything into a questionable state. Mining is so 2022, it's all AI now. And these aren't intended for gaming like... at all.
10X Better than the original real life. Trade/no-trade. War doesn't really discriminate much. Stupidity is it's harbinger and we have plenty of that (always have). Look up stuff like Thucydides. Nutz!!