Audio By Carbonatix
Microchip maker Nvidia said it would be hit with $5.5bn (£4.2bn) in costs after the US government tightened export rules to China.
The chip manufacturing giant, which has been at the heart of the artificial intelligence (AI) boom, will require licences to export its H20 AI chip to China, which has been one of its most popular.
The rules come amid an escalating trade war between the US and China, with both countries introducing steep trade tariffs on each other covering various goods.
Nvidia shares plunged almost 6% in after-hours trading.
Nvidia announced on Tuesday that the US government had told it last week that the H20 chip required a permit to be sold to China, including Hong Kong.
The tech giant said federal officials had advised them the licence requirement "will be in effect for the indefinite future".
"The [government] indicated that the license requirement addresses the risk that the covered products may be used in, or diverted to, a supercomputer in China," Nvidia said.
The company declined to comment further when contacted by the BBC.
Marc Einstein from the Counterpoint Research consultancy said the $5.5bn hit estimated by Nvidia was in line with his estimates.
"While this is certainly a lot of money, this is something Nvidia can bear," he said.
"But as we have seen in the last few days and weeks, this may largely be a negotiating tactic. I wouldn't be surprised to see some exemptions or changes made to tariff policy in the near future, given this not only impacts Nvidia but the entire US semiconductor ecosystem," Mr Einstein added.
Chips remain a battleground in the US-China race for tech supremacy, and US President Donald Trump now wants to turbocharge a highly complex and delicate manufacturing process that has taken other regions decades to perfect.
Nvidia's AI chips have been a key focus of US export controls. Founded in 1993, it was originally known for making the type of computer chips that process graphics, particularly for computer games.
Long before the AI revolution, it started adding features to its chips that it says help machine learning. It is now seen as a key company to watch to see how fast AI-powered tech is spreading across the business world.
The company's value took a hit in January when it was reported that a rival Chinese AI app, DeepSeek, had been built at a fraction of the cost of other chatbots.
At the time, the US was considered to have been caught off guard by their rival's technological achievement.
Nvidia said its $5.5bn charges would be associated with H20 products for inventory, purchase commitments and related reserves.
Rui Ma, founder of the Tech Buzz China podcast, said she expects the US and China AI semiconductor supply chains to be "fully decoupled" if restrictions stay in place.
She added: "It doesn't make any sense for any Chinese customer to be dependent on US chips" especially since there is an oversupply of data centres in China.
Latest Stories
-
Director General of NaCCA must be fired for sleeping on the job – Ntim Fordjour
10 minutes -
Foh-Amoaning urges inquiry into curriculum after NaCCA withdraws teacher manual over gender content
22 minutes -
Learning to Stay Healthy in the New Year – Focus on the Basics
24 minutes -
Ghana aims to attain WHO Level Five preparedness under new health security plan
26 minutes -
African nations slam U.S. military strikes in Venezuela as threat to global sovereignty
36 minutes -
President Mahama’s First Year: Cautious reform or dangerous complacency?
43 minutes -
Prof Bokpin calls on gov’t to apologise over NaCCA SHS teacher manual response
45 minutes -
UN Security Council weighs dangerous precedent set by US military operation in Venezuela
47 minutes -
Semenyo’s personality fits right with Man City team – Bernardo Silva
52 minutes -
One killed in road crash at Anyaa Market
57 minutes -
China announces record $1tn trade surplus despite Trump tariffs
1 hour -
Global temperatures dipped in 2025 but more heat records on way, scientists warn
1 hour -
Police arrest man over alleged sale of 3-year-old son for GH¢1m
1 hour -
Asiedu Nketia calls for investigation into cocoa sack procurement under ex-government
1 hour -
Ghanaians divided over DStv upgrades as government ramps up anti-piracy war
1 hour
