Trump enacts 25% tariff on chips
Digest more
Trump imposes a 25% tariff on select AI chips as the US eases restrictions on limited exports to China. The White House says broader semiconductor tariffs may follow.
Morning Overview on MSN
China’s new AI chips: How close are they to Nvidia H200?
China’s push to build its own high‑end AI accelerators has moved from aspiration to measurable silicon, and the obvious yardstick is Nvidia’s H200. The question is no longer whether Chinese vendors can tape out advanced chips,
The US Commerce Department on Tuesday opened the door for Nvidia to sell advanced artificial intelligence chips in China with restrictions, following through on a policy shift announced last month by President Donald Trump.
HOUSTON – Federal prosecutors announced Monday the first-ever conviction in an artificial intelligence technology smuggling case, uncovering a sophisticated scheme to illegally export over $160 million worth of advanced computer chips to China through a ...
President Donald Trump recently announced he has approved the sale of advanced computer chips to China. Manufactured by Nvidia, the chips are one of the most powerful artificial intelligence (AI) accelerators on the market. But the president’s decision ...
Chip-import dependence is a national-security threat. A 'chip-for-chip' tariff could be a $230 billion revenue windfall and spur U.S. semiconductor production. Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang (right) and U.S. President Donald Trump at the White House in April 2025.
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent suggested that the US eventually could allow high-end computer chips made by Nvidia Corp. to be sold to Chinese companies as he teased additional meetings between President Donald Trump and the Chinese leader Xi Jinping ...
WASHINGTON (AP) — President Donald Trump said Monday that he would allow Nvidia to sell an advanced type of computer chip used in the development of artificial intelligence to “approved customers” in China. There have been concerns about allowing ...
NVIDIA’s advanced GPUs are primarily manufactured by TSMC in Taiwan, but geopolitical risks are pushing the company to diversify its production. A significant partnership with Intel aims to leverage their manufacturing, packaging, and testing capabilities for custom chips, reducing reliance on a single source.