“While small amounts of H200 [semiconductor] products for China-based customers were approved by the US government, we have yet to generate any revenue,” Nvidia’s CFO Colette M. Kress said on an earnings call Wednesday local time, according to a FactSet transcript.
“We do not know whether any imports will be allowed into China,” she said.
China once accounted for at least one-fifth of Nvidia’s data center revenue.
Global AI disruption
“Our competitors in China, bolstered by recent IPOs, are making progress and have the potential to disrupt the structure of the global AI industry over the long-term,” Kress said.
She urged the U.S. to encourage every developer and business, including those in China, to use American technology.
OpenAI’s Sam Altman also described the progress of Chinese tech companies across the entire stack as “remarkable” in an interview with CNBC on Feb. 19. He also noted that Chinese tech companies are near the frontier in some areas.
While Chinese AI companies lag the U.S. slightly in capabilities, their products are typically far cheaper than their American rivals.
“You could see easily a world where maybe most of the world’s population is running on a Chinese tech stack in five to 10 years’ time,” Rory Green, TS Lombard’s chief China economist and head of Asia research, told CNBC’s “Squawk Box Europe” earlier this month.

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