Nvidia, the Stock
Digest more
21hon MSN
American chipmaking giant Nvidia (NVDA) says it plans to resume sales to China of an artificial intelligence chip that’s become part of a global race pitting the world’s biggest economies against each other.
Semiconductor giant Nvidia continues to be a Wall Street favorite -- and for all the right reasons. The company's transition from a prominent GPU company to a full-stack artificial intelligence (AI) infrastructure provider has been genuinely exceptional.
22hon MSN
David Sacks said this would "deprive Huawei of basically having this giant market share in China."
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang said the Trump administration is letting it sell its advanced H20 computer chips to China — a reversal in policy.
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang praised China's AI models a day after the U.S. chipmaker said it expected to resume sales of a key product to China. "More than 1.5 million developers in China build on Nvidia today to bring their innovations to life," he said.
Nvidia stock spiked on Tuesday. The AI chip titan said it had received assurances from the administration that it can resume sales of key AI chips to China.
Washington has been concerned China could use Nvidia’s chips to get a jump on the U.S. in high-tech fields, particularly when it comes to artificial intelligence.
Nvidia Corp. plans to resume sales of its H20 AI chip to China after securing Washington’s assurances that such shipments would get approved, a dramatic reversal from the Trump
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang contradicts Anthropic CEO's 'white-collar apocalypse' prediction, suggesting AI will augment jobs while encouraging workers to adapt.
NVIDIA can start selling its H20 AI GPU to China again after gaining approval to do so from the US government.
Welcome to Tech In Depth, our daily newsletter about the business of tech from Bloomberg’s journalists around the world. Today, Mackenzie Hawkins looks at the reversal from the Trump administration on a subject that US officials had repeatedly said was not up for discussion.
As the AI chipmaker rockets past a $4 trillion valuation, CEO Jensen Huang lays out a stunning vision of a future with robot assistants and revived American factories, but admits the transition won't be painless.