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China halts Nvidia H200 orders pending import conditions
Beijing has instructed Chinese tech firms to pause orders for Nvidia's advanced H200 AI chips while regulators finalize import requirements, according to multiple reports this week.
The directive coincides with deliberations over mandating purchases of domestic chips alongside each H200 order. This suspension follows President Donald Trump's December decision to allow H200 exports to China in exchange for a 25 percent tax remitted to the U.S. government, reversing Biden-era restrictions.
Bloomberg reported Thursday that China plans to approve select H200 imports this quarter for specific commercial uses, barring military, sensitive government agencies, critical infrastructure, and state-owned enterprises for security reasons. These limits mirror prior restrictions on foreign tech from Apple and Micron.
Strong demand meets strict terms
Demand persists despite regulatory uncertainty. Alibaba and ByteDance each privately signaled interest in over 200,000 H200 units, sources say. Chinese tech companies placed orders exceeding 2 million chips at around $27,000 each nearly triple Nvidia's current 700,000-unit inventory.
At this week's CES in Las Vegas, Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang noted H200 customer demand runs "quite high" and the firm has "activated its supply chain" to ramp production. Huang expects no formal Beijing statement, adding "if purchase orders come, it's because they can place orders."
Reuters reported Wednesday that Nvidia demands full upfront payment from Chinese clients, with no cancellations, refunds, or configuration changes post-order. These stringent terms shift financial risk to buyers amid uncertainty over Beijing's shipping approvals. Nvidia previously wrote down $5.5 billion in inventory after the Trump administration abruptly banned H20 chip sales to China last year.
Balancing innovation and tech autonomy
The H200 delivers roughly six times the performance of the now-banned H20, which Nvidia tailored for China. Domestic chipmakers like Huawei offer AI processors such as the Ascend 910C, but lag the H200 for large-scale advanced AI model training.
Beijing navigates a delicate balance between meeting immediate high-performance chip needs for its tech firms and advancing long-term semiconductor self-reliance. Government officials recently met chip designers, manufacturers, and major tech companies to gauge H200 demand and review policy options.
Nvidia plans to fulfill initial orders from existing stock, with first H200 deliveries arriving before mid-February Lunar New Year holidays. The company also tapped Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing to boost output for Chinese demand, with additional production slated for Q2 2026.