The future of  Nvidia  in  China  is becoming increasingly uncertain. At the start of October 2024, the Chinese administration issued a  recommendation  to artificial intelligence (AI) companies, urging them to prioritize the use of  chips produced in China . Fast forward ten months, and this recommendation has evolved into a  requirement . The Chinese government is now mandating that state-owned data centers utilize at least  50%  of Chinese integrated circuits in their servers.

In contrast, Nvidia has finally acquired the export license necessary to sell its  H20 AI GPU . However, the Chinese government has effectively vetoed this chip. The  Cyberspace Administration of China , which regulates internet activity within the country, is currently investigating the H20 GPU due to suspicions that it could contain a  backdoor  that might be exploited by foreign entities. This investigation severely limits the likelihood of China adopting this chip for its needs.

The direct fallout from this unfavorable scenario for Nvidia is evident: in the last quarter, the company did not sell a single H20 GPU in China, as noted by  Shaun Rein , an expert in the Chinese economy and founder of the  China Market Research Group (CMR)  based in Shanghai. While this statement holds some truth, it does have a catch. For a considerable part of last quarter, Nvidia lacked the export license required to deliver this chip to Chinese clients, though it now possesses it. With this license in hand, it could have shipped  thousands  of these GPUs in recent weeks.

China Has Alternatives Designed to Compete with Nvidia Chips

Despite aggressive efforts from the U.S. government to stifle competition,  cutting-edge AI chips  are still finding their way into China. These chips are primarily being imported through  secondary markets  and  parallel imports  from countries like  India, Malaysia,  and  Singapore , where U.S. regulations hold limited sway. Moreover, developers creating significant AI models that utilize  CUDA  have discovered reliable avenues through the international second-hand market.

 Cambricon Technologies  is a rising star among companies specializing in AI chip design.

China currently boasts three significant alternatives to Nvidia. Among them,  Cambricon Technologies —while not as well-known as  Huawei  or  Moore Threads —is one of the companies with the  highest growth potential  in the design of AI GPUs. Recently, it secured approval from the  Shanghai Stock Exchange  to  raise $560 million  for the development of four chips destined for AI model training and inference, and to create an alternative to  CUDA .

Another key player,  Moore Threads , has developed several GPUs targeted for AI applications that compete with advanced offerings from Nvidia, AMD, and Huawei. Noteworthy products in its lineup include the  MTT S4000  and  MTT S3000  cards, which offer capabilities that rival established market leaders. Interestingly, the  MTT S80  card, designed for gaming and content creation, claims to deliver a computation capacity of  14.4 TFLOPS  in single-precision floating-point operations.

The third essential player in China’s AI chip sector is  Huawei . Its flagship product, the  Ascend 910D  chip, is designed to surpass the performance of Nvidia’s  H100 GPU . Huawei has also recently introduced the  Ascend 920  chip, strategically aimed at filling the void that the Nvidia H20 GPU will leave in China’s market. This chip is slated for large-scale production in the latter half of  2025 , employing  6nm  integration technology purportedly developed in collaboration with  SMIC  (Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corporation).

Image | Nvidia | Zhang Kaiyv

More information | Shaun Rein

In Xataka | The U.S. gives  Huawei  a tremendous opportunity to fill the gap left by Nvidia in China’s AI chip market.



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