Despite the earnings beat, Nvidia effectively has no active revenue from China right now. CEO Jensen Huang has said the company’s AI accelerator market share in China has fallen from roughly 95% to zero after multiple rounds of export restrictions.
Several factors combined to create this situation.
U.S. export restrictions limit the performance of chips that can be sold to Chinese companies. This has prevented Nvidia from selling many of its most advanced AI GPUs—including models derived from architectures such as A100, H100, and H200—to Chinese buyers.
These rules forced Nvidia to redesign or limit products for the Chinese market and have significantly constrained shipments.
Reports indicate that export licenses were discussed or granted allowing some Chinese firms to buy H200 chips, but no shipments had occurred by the time of the earnings report.
Without both regulatory approval and actual deliveries, those potential orders have not translated into revenue.
At the same time, China has accelerated development of its own AI semiconductor ecosystem. Companies such as Huawei are filling the gap left by Nvidia’s absence.
Huawei alone expects around $12 billion in AI processor revenue in 2026, driven by demand from major Chinese tech firms like Alibaba, Tencent, and ByteDance.
Once Chinese companies shift their infrastructure to domestic chips and software stacks, switching back becomes harder—creating a long‑term competitive risk for Nvidia.
Even when Nvidia proposes China‑compliant versions of its chips, purchases depend on both U.S. export approvals and Chinese government acceptance. At the moment, those conditions are not aligned, leaving the market effectively frozen.
The shutdown of Nvidia’s China business is notable because the country represents one of the world’s largest potential AI infrastructure markets. Huang has described China’s AI chip opportunity as potentially worth about $50 billion over time.
Before the restrictions intensified, China accounted for a meaningful share of Nvidia’s data‑center sales and was one of its fastest‑growing markets. Losing access to that demand means Nvidia’s current growth is happening almost entirely outside China.
Despite losing the Chinese market, Nvidia continues to deliver record results because global demand for AI compute is still expanding rapidly.
Large cloud providers, startups building foundation models, and government‑backed “sovereign AI” projects worldwide are investing billions in GPU infrastructure. That demand has been large enough to more than offset the missing Chinese revenue.
The biggest long‑term risk is not Nvidia’s near‑term revenue—it’s market replacement.
If Chinese companies permanently adopt domestic chips from suppliers like Huawei, Nvidia could lose what was once a dominant position in a huge AI market. The longer export controls and political barriers persist, the more entrenched those alternatives may become.
For now, Nvidia’s financial performance remains extraordinarily strong. But the company’s record quarter also highlights a striking reality: the world’s leading AI chipmaker is thriving globally while being almost completely shut out of one of the largest technology markets on earth.
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