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Nvidia CEO: China has not yet finalised the license for H200 chip

The Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang stated on Thursday that he hoped China would allow the U.S. tech giant to sell their powerful 'H200 Artificial Intelligence Chip in China and the license is currently being finalised.

Huang arrived in Taipei after a trip to China, where he visited government officials, customers and partners.

"The H200 license is currently being finalised. I hope that the Chinese government will also allow Nvidia the sale of the H200. They have to make a decision. "I'm hoping for a favorable decision," he said to reporters at Taipei Songshan Airport.

I think H200 is a very good thing for American technological leadership. It is also good for the Chinese Market. "And customers would love to have H200," said he.

"I'm waiting for a good outcome." We just need to be patient, he said.

CHINA APPROVES CHIP BUYING WITH CONDITIONS Citing a source, reported on Wednesday, that China had given approval for ByteDance to buy more than 400,000 'H200' chips.

The approvals were accompanied by conditions that one source deemed too restrictive. Customers have not yet converted the approvals into purchase orders. Huang stated that the company had not received such information, and that he believed that the Chinese government is still in the decision-making process. He did not explain 'why China is still deciding.

China has not provided a reason why it hasn't approved the imports H200, but Beijing wanted to strike a balance between meeting the demands of its AI sector and nurturing its domestic semiconductor industries.

The H200 chip from Nvidia, the second-most powerful AI chip in the world, has been a major point of contention between U.S. and China relations. Beijing has been the biggest obstacle to shipping despite strong demand for Nvidia's H200 from Chinese companies and U.S. approval of exports.

Huang said that China had many chip manufacturers and Nvidia would need to compete very aggressively.

The first thing we need are orders. Huang replied that he had a supply to support all his existing customers.

If H200 is approved we will?work together with TSMC in order to plan and schedule the supply, and deliver as quickly as possible."

HUANG SIGNALS INTERESTED IN OPENAI FINANCING ROUND

Huang responded that he would love to invest in OpenAI when asked about a possible further investment in ChatGPT, but did not confirm the amount of funding.

Nvidia, Amazon and Microsoft are 'talking about' investing up to $60 billion into OpenAI. The chip titan will provide up to $30 billion.

The Information reported

on Wednesday.

The U.S. chip giant relies heavily upon Taiwan's supply chains, working closely together with Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co., the world's biggest contract chipmaker. Major contract manufacturers such as Foxconn and Wistron are also involved.

TSMC also invests $165 billion? in Arizona to build factories and meet the growing demand for products there.

Huang stated that he expected the demand for TSMC wafers to far outweigh the energy supply in Taiwan.

"I think it's fantastic for TSMC." TSMC now has a global presence," said the Taiwanese CEO, who added that he planned to meet TSMC's CEO C.C. Wei and the other Taiwanese partners in the supply chain. (Reporting and editing by Wen Yee Lee, Ben Blanchard, Himani Sarkar and Shri Navaratnam; Louise Heavens, Anne Marie Roantree and Himani Sarkar)

(source: Reuters)