Santa Clara, CA – July 15, 2025 – In a dramatic reversal with major implications for the global AI race, chipmaking titan Nvidia (NVDA) secured critical U.S. government assurances to resume sales of its H20 artificial intelligence processors to China, sending its stock soaring over 4.5% in Tuesday trading and further cementing its historic $4 trillion market valuation.
The announcement, made late Monday, resolves months of uncertainty after the Trump administration abruptly halted exports of the H20 chip in April through tightened licensing requirements. That move forced Nvidia to take a massive $4.5 billion inventory write-down and projected $2.5 billion in lost sales.
“The U.S. government has assured NVIDIA that licenses will be granted, and NVIDIA hopes to start deliveries soon,” the company stated, adding it was already filing the necessary applications. The news propelled NVDA shares to record highs above $170, building on its landmark achievement last week as the first publicly traded company to reach a $4 trillion market cap.
Geopolitical Thaw Paves Way for Critical Market Access
The green light follows intense lobbying by CEO Jensen Huang, who met personally with President Donald Trump last week and engaged Chinese officials and major clients like ByteDance, Alibaba, and Tencent in Beijing this week. Huang emphasized the strategic importance of the Chinese market, stating, “It’s really important that American companies are able to compete and serve the market here in China.”
- Compliance-Driven Design: The H20 GPU was specifically engineered to meet prior U.S. export restrictions on advanced computing power. Its resumption signals a calibrated approach by the administration amidst escalating tech trade tensions.
- Mitigating Competitive Risks: Huang had warned that cutting off China risked ceding AI leadership to domestic rivals like Huawei. Resuming H20 sales helps Nvidia maintain its foothold against rising Chinese chipmakers.
- Logistics & Uncertainty: Despite the assurance, Chinese clients expressed concerns about potential delays in receiving H20 orders and ongoing pressure from Beijing to source locally from firms like Huawei and Cambricon.
Doubling Down on China: New Compliant GPU Launched
Alongside the H20 news, Nvidia unveiled a new “fully compliant” GPU tailored for China: the RTX Pro, based on its Blackwell architecture but stripped of advanced features like high-bandwidth memory and NVLink to adhere to export controls.
- Targeted Applications: Huang positioned the RTX Pro as “ideal for digital twin AI for smart factories and logistics” – crucial areas for China’s industrial automation push.
- Strategic Roadmap: This release demonstrates Nvidia’s commitment to adapting its product pipeline for geopolitical realities, ensuring continued revenue streams from its second-largest market.

Market Impact: Chip Stocks Rally, Broader Indices Edge Up
Nvidia’s surge lifted the broader semiconductor sector and tech-heavy indices:
- S&P 500 rose 0.3%, hitting a fresh record above 6,300
- Nasdaq Composite climbed 0.7%
- AMD jumped over 7%, benefiting from positive sentiment around China access and its own new MI350 AI chips
- TSMC (Nvidia’s manufacturer) gained 2.4%
Macro Backdrop: Inflation Ticks Up, Trump Pushes Fed for Cuts
The chip news unfolded against a mixed economic landscape:
- June CPI Report: Showed inflation accelerated to 2.7% year-over-year (from 2.4% in May), with core inflation at 2.9%. President Trump immediately renewed his demand for aggressive Fed rate cuts: “Consumer Prices LOW. Bring down the Fed Rate, NOW!!!… Fed should cut Rates by 3 Points.” Analysts, however, noted the data reflected the beginning of tariff impacts, warning a “tariff-driven inflation reckoning is coming.”
- Bank Earnings Kickoff: Major banks reported mixed Q2 results. Citigroup (C) surged ~1.6% after beating estimates on strong trading revenue. JPMorgan (JPM) edged down despite an earnings beat. Wells Fargo (WFC) fell over 4% after cutting its net interest income guidance.
Sovereign AI & The $4 Trillion Future
Nvidia’s record valuation hinges on its dominance in powering the global AI boom. While giants like Alphabet and Amazon develop custom chips, Nvidia is countering with strategic diversification:
- Sovereign AI: A major growth pillar involves helping nations like France, Italy, Saudi Arabia, and the U.K. build domestic AI infrastructure using thousands of Nvidia Blackwell chips – reducing reliance on U.S. hyperscalers.
- Valuation Check: Despite its dominance, analysts flag Nvidia’s forward P/E of 53 (vs. S&P 500’s 30) as a sign much future growth is already priced in. Execution on China sales and new markets like automotive automation and robotics will be critical for its next leg.
What’s Next for Nvidia?
- H20 Shipment Timeline: Clarity on license approvals and delivery schedules to Chinese clients.
- Q3/Q4 Revenue Impact: Analysts project a significant H2 2025 revenue boost from resumed China sales.
- Policy Vigilance: Ongoing risk of future U.S. export restrictions.
- Competition: AMD’s aggressive push with its MI350 (and future MI400) chips and pricing.
