The vacuum left by Nvidia is being rapidly filled by Huawei, which Huang has openly acknowledged as the primary beneficiary of the U.S. policy. He told CNBC that Nvidia has “largely conceded” the China AI chip market to Huawei, which is now experiencing record years .
Huawei’s flagship AI processor, the Ascend 950PR, delivers roughly 2 PFLOPs of performance and is projected to command approximately 60% of China’s AI chip market by the end of 2026 . The financial stakes are enormous: Huawei is reportedly targeting $12 billion in AI chip revenue for 2026, a direct result of the forced shift in the Chinese market
. The strategic consequence is a swift transition from Nvidia’s CUDA software ecosystem to Huawei’s proprietary CANN framework, a migration that threatens to decouple China’s AI software stack from American hardware entirely
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Huang’s most pointed warning is reserved for the future implications of this split. On the Dwarkesh Podcast, he called a scenario where Chinese AI labs optimize their models for Huawei chips “a horrible outcome” for the United States. His specific concern was DeepSeek, the influential Chinese AI startup, preparing to launch its V4 model on Huawei’s Ascend 950PR hardware .
This shift, Huang argues, would enable China—with its “abundant” energy resources and large pool of researchers—to develop a superior, sovereign AI standard. He warns that as “AI diffuses out into the rest of the world” with Chinese standards, the U.S. risks losing its technological advantage . Huang has been candid about the trajectory, stating that “China is not behind” and is in “striking distance” of taking the global AI lead
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Despite the market collapse and a massive $5.5 billion inventory write-down on blocked H20 chips, Huang is not retreating. His strategy is centered on intense policy advocacy for a more nuanced approach . He has met separately with President Donald Trump and Senate Republicans to lobby for federal AI policies that permit at least limited sales of advanced chips to China
. Huang argues that Nvidia should not be forced to “degrade” its chips for export, as such limits have demonstrably not impeded Chinese AI advancement
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In public, Huang continues to hold the door open for a return. In July 2025, he visited Beijing and reaffirmed that Nvidia would not abandon the world's largest semiconductor market . By May 2026, he signaled that the market could reopen, suggesting limited H200 exports might be possible if restrictions ease, though he acknowledged that the Chinese government itself must decide how much to open its market
. Huang’s persistent push for “nuance rather than an all-or-nothing approach” underscores his belief that engagement is the only path to maintaining U.S. competitiveness and influence
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