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Semiconductors costing Nvidia, AMD dearly

Semiconductors costing Nvidia, AMD dearly

Kuwait Times21 hours ago
BEIJING: US semiconductor giants Nvidia and Advanced Micro Devices will pay the United States government 15 percent of their revenue from selling artificial intelligence chips to China, according to media reports. Here is what you need to know about the chips and their role in the US-China tech war:
The chips in question, according to the reports, are Nvidia's 'H20' chip and the 'MI308' from Advanced Micro Devices (AMD). The California-based companies developed these chips—less powerful than their flagship models—specifically for the Chinese market.
They are significant as they are AI 'accelerators', meaning that they are useful in carrying out demanding tasks and computation, said Dylan Loh, an assistant professor at Singapore's Nanyang Technological University. 'This is obviously a key tool to expand the AI-hungry demands of countries and companies building out their AI tools,' Loh told AFP.
Previously, the United States had been restricting the export of such chips on national security grounds. The two chipmakers had warned in April of big financial losses connected to these earlier constraints. Nvidia expected the previous rules to cost it $5.5 billion, while AMD forecast it could sap as much as $800 million from the company's bottom line. Nvidia and other US chip companies have lobbied against the tough restrictions in recent years on selling cutting-edge semiconductors to China. That pressure appeared to have paid off last month, when Nvidia said Washington had pledged to let the company sell the H20 chips to China.
The policy reversal has 'raised eyebrows', Loh said. 'These chips and many other chips have a dual use nature which means it can be used to advance their military capabilities in various ways,' he told AFP. This includes the possible use of these chips potentially by US forces in the event of a confrontation, Chong Ja Ian, an associate professor at the National University of Singapore, told AFP. Defending the policy change last month, US President Donald Trump's AI point person David Sacks told CNBC the H20 was a 'deprecated chip' that is 'not anywhere close to the state of the art'. He said the reversal on the H20 came because Nvidia's Chinese rival Huawei was making 'huge strides' and could potentially threaten Nvidia's market dominance.
Sunday's reported deal is 'unprecedented' though, Chong said. 'They do suggest the cost of market access in an environment of more intense major power competition,' he added. There could still be obstacles ahead for the chipmakers. US lawmakers have proposed plans to require Nvidia and other manufacturers of advanced AI chips to include built-in location tracking capabilities. On Thursday, Trump demanded that the new boss of US chip maker Intel resign 'immediately', after a Republican senator raised national security concerns over his links to firms in China. China has meanwhile sought to increase its self-reliance in the field of semiconductors. Nvidia is facing growing distrust in China, with state media on Sunday labelling the H20 chips as unsafe. —AFP
'The US government's decision to allow Nvidia to export the H20 to China inevitably raises some troubling concerns,' said Yuyuan Tantian, an outlet affiliated with state broadcaster CCTV. It is not a secure chip for China, not advanced, and not environmentally friendly, it added in an article on social media platform WeChat.
Beijing's top internet regulator summoned Nvidia representatives in July to discuss 'serious security issues' involving the H20. The Cyberspace Administration of China said it had asked Nvidia to 'explain the security risks of vulnerabilities and backdoors in its H20 chips sold to China and submit relevant supporting materials'. The statement noted that, according to US experts, location tracking and remote shutdown technologies for Nvidia chips 'are already matured'. – AFP
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Agility Global PLC Reports Q2 2025 EBIT of $97 Million
Agility Global PLC Reports Q2 2025 EBIT of $97 Million

Arab Times

time11 minutes ago

  • Arab Times

Agility Global PLC Reports Q2 2025 EBIT of $97 Million

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Nvidia, AMD to pay 15% of China chip sale revenue to US
Nvidia, AMD to pay 15% of China chip sale revenue to US

Kuwait Times

timean hour ago

  • Kuwait Times

Nvidia, AMD to pay 15% of China chip sale revenue to US

BEIJING/WASHINGTON: Nvidia and Advanced Micro Devices have agreed to give the US government 15 percent of revenue from sales to China of certain advanced computer chips, a US official said on Sunday, in an unusual move likely to faze American companies. The deal is extremely rare for the US and marks President Donald Trump's latest intervention in corporate decision-making, after pressuring executives to invest in American manufacturing and demanding new Intel CEO Lip-Bu Tan resign over ties to Chinese companies. Analysts said the levy may hit margins at the chipmakers and set a precedent for Washington to tax critical US exports, potentially extending beyond semiconductors. Trump's administration halted sales of Nvidia's H20 chips to China in April, but the company said last month it had won clearance to resume shipments and hoped to start deliveries soon. The Commerce Department has started issuing licenses for the sale of H20 chips to China, another US official said on Friday. Both the US officials declined to named because details have not been made public. The China curbs are expected to cost Nvidia and AMD billions of dollars in revenue, and successive US administrations have sought in recent years to limit Beijing's access to cutting-edge chips that could bolster China's military. Washington does not feel the sale of H20 and equivalent chips compromises national security, said the first US official. The official did not know when or how the agreement with the chip companies would be implemented, but said the administration would be in compliance with the law. The US Constitution prohibits Congress from laying taxes and duties on articles exported from any state. The Export Clause applies to taxes and duties, not user fees. When asked if Nvidia had agreed to pay 15 percent of revenues to the US, a company spokesperson said: 'We follow rules the US government sets for our participation in worldwide markets.' 'While we haven't shipped H20 to China for months, we hope export control rules will let America compete in China and worldwide,' the spokesperson added. A spokesperson for AMD said the US approved its applications to export some AI processors to China, but did not directly address the revenue-sharing agreement and said the company's business adheres to all US export controls. The US Commerce Department did not immediately comment. China's foreign ministry said the country has repeatedly stated its position on US chip exports. The ministry has previously accused Washington of using technology and trade measures to 'maliciously contain and suppress China.' The Financial Times, which first reported the development, said the chip firms agreed to the arrangement as a condition for obtaining the export licenses for their semiconductors, including AMD's chips. It added that the Trump administration had yet to determine how to use the money. 'The Chinese market is significant for both these companies so even if they have to give up a bit of the money, they would otherwise make it looks like a logical move on paper,' AJ Bell investment director Russ Mould said. Still, analysts and experts questioned the logic of resuming sales if the chips could pose a national security risk. 'Decisions on export licenses should be determined by national security considerations and the tradeoffs of US policy goals, not a revenue-creating possibility,' said Martin Chorzempa, senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics, an independent research institution. 'What it ends up creating is an incentive to control things, to then extract a payment, rather than controlling things because we're actually concerned about the risk to national security.' US Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick said last month the planned resumption of sales of the AI chips was part of US negotiations with China to get rare earths and described the H20 as Nvidia's 'fourth-best chip' in an interview with CNBC. He said it was in US interests for Chinese firms to use American technology, even if the most advanced chips remained barred, to keep them on a US 'tech stack'. Some elements of Trump's trade policy are already facing legal scrutiny, with a federal appeals panel skeptical of his claim that a 1977 law, traditionally used to sanction enemies or freeze assets, also empowered him to impose tariffs. 'We aren't sure we like the precedent this sets,' Bernstein analysts said of the revenue-share deal. 'Will it stop with Chinese AI? Will it stop with controlled products? Will other companies be required to pay to sell into the region?' 'It feels like a slippery slope to us.' The analysts estimated the deal would cut gross margins on the China-bound processors by 5 to 15 percentage points, shaving about a point from Nvidia and AMD's overall margins. Nvidia generated $17 billion in revenue from China in the fiscal year ending January 26, representing 13 percent of total sales. — Reuters

India pushes ahead with US trade talks despite tariff hike
India pushes ahead with US trade talks despite tariff hike

Kuwait Times

timean hour ago

  • Kuwait Times

India pushes ahead with US trade talks despite tariff hike

JALANDHAR: A worker dries maize kernels at a wholesale grain market in Jalandhar.-- AFP NEW DELHI/MUMBAI: India hopes trade talks with the US will continue even as the US hiked tariffs on its exports to 50 percent due to New Delhi's purchase of sanctioned Russian oil, two lawmakers said on Monday, citing a briefing to a parliamentary panel on foreign affairs. Last week, President Donald Trump imposed an additional 25 percent tariff on Indian goods due to Delhi's continued purchase of Russian oil, bringing the total duty on Indian exports to the US to 50 percent - among the highest of any American trading partner. 'Our relations with the US are multi-dimensional, and should not be seen only through the prism of trade,' one of the lawmakers said, citing the foreign secretary's briefing to the panel. Shashi Tharoor, an opposition Congress party leader, who heads the panel, said trade talks would continue. 'As of now, there is no change in the existing plans for the sixth round,' he said, referring to a scheduled visit of a US trade delegation to New Delhi from August 25. Earlier, junior finance minister, Pankaj Chaudhary told lawmakers that about 55 percent of India's merchandise exports to the United States would covered by the new tariff. His estimate factored in the initial 25 percent levy, he said in a written response to a lawmaker's query. 'The Department of Commerce is engaged with all stakeholders' for their assessment of the situation, Chaudhary added. Goods trade between the United States and India - the world's biggest and fifth-largest economies, respectively - was worth about $87 billion in the last fiscal year, according to Indian government estimates. The panel separately voiced concerns over Pakistani army chief Field Marshal Asim Munir's reported remarks on nuclear threats in South Asia during a visit to the US. 'Nuclear blackmail will not work with India, and no party, or representative disagrees with this view,' Tharoor said, adding the external affairs ministry had condemned the comments. – Reuters

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