Amid restrictions on selling its chips to China, Nvidia CEO Huang expresses disappointment, says…
GH News September 18, 2025 03:06 PM

Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang expressed disappointment over the strict limits on selling the company’s chips to China imposed amid the ongoing US-China trade and technology tensions.
Huang said he plans to raise the issue with President Donald Trump during a state banquet hosted by the British government on Wednesday night.
Challenges In Front Of Nvidia
Nvidia headquartered in Santa Clara California and currently the world’s most valuable company is barred from exporting its most advanced chips to China where demand is high for developing artificial intelligence.
This week Beijing regulators also targeted the company accusing it of antitrust breaches stemming from a 2020 acquisition of an Israeli tech company.
Adding to the problems the Financial Times reported Wednesday citing unnamed sources that Chinas internet regulator is banning domestic tech companies from buying an Nvidia chip model tailored for the local market.
Jensen Huang On Ban On Chip Exports
Asked about the report at a media briefing in London Jensen Huang said he didnt have a reaction but added “I think that we could only be in service of a market if the country wants us to be.”
China is the worlds second biggest AI computing market and Nvidia has contributed more than most companies he said.
“Im disappointed with what I see but they have larger agendas to work out you know between China and the United States and Im understanding of that and were patient about it” he said.
Huang said the company will continue to be “supportive” of both governments as they “sort through these geopolitical policies” adding theres “not very much anxiety there.”
The CEO is visiting London at same time as Trump to unveil a flurry of new investments that coincide with the presidents visit including a deal to supply tens of thousands of its processor chips for data centres that will be part of the UK arm of Stargate a Trump-backed AI infrastructure project led by OpenAI.
(With Inputs From Agencies)