
Nvidia earnings top expectations despite United States export curbs
Agencies
Chip giant Nvidia on Wednesday reported earnings that surpassed market expectations, with a $4.5 billion hit from U.S. export controls being less than the company had feared.
However, Nvidia CFO Colette Kress warned in an earnings call that export constraints are expected to cost the AI chip titan about $8 billion in the current quarter.
In April, Nvidia notified regulators that it expected a $5.5 billion hit in the recently ended quarter due to a new U.S. licensing requirement on the primary chip it can legally sell in China.
U.S. officials had told Nvidia that it must obtain licenses to export its H20 chips to China because of concerns they may be used in supercomputers there, the company said in a Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) filing.
The new licensing rule applies to Nvidia graphics processing units, or GPUs, with bandwidth similar to that of the H20.
'China is one of the world's largest AI markets and a springboard to global success,' Nvidia chief executive Jensen Huang said in an earnings call.
'The platform that wins China is positioned to lead globally; however, the $50 billion China market is effectively closed to us.' Nvidia cannot dial back the capabilities of its H20 chips any further to comply with U.S. export constraints, winding up forced to write off billions of dollars on inventory that can't be sold or repurposed, according to Huang.
'The U.S. has based its policy on the assumption that China cannot make AI chips,' Huang said.'That assumption was always questionable and now it's clearly wrong.' China's AI is moving on without Nvidia technology, while that country's chip-makers innovate products and ramp up operations, according to Huang.
'The question is not whether China will have AI; it already does,' he said.
'The question is whether one of the world's largest markets will run on American platforms.' The new requirements resulted in Nvidia incurring a charge of $4.5 billion in the quarter, associated with H20 excess inventory and purchase obligations, 'as demand for H20 diminished,' the chipmaker said in an earnings report.
U.S. export constraints stopped Nvidia from bringing in an additional $2.5 billion worth of H20 revenue in the quarter, according to the company.Nvidia said it made a profit of $18.8 billion on revenue of $44.1 billion, causing shares to rise more than 4% in after-market trades.
Hot demand Huang said demand for the company's AI-powering technology remains strong, and a new Blackwell NVL72 AI supercomputer referred to as a 'thinking machine' is in full-scale production.
'Countries around the world are recognizing AI as essential infrastructure – just like electricity and the internet – and Nvidia stands at the center of this profound transformation,' Huang said.
Nvidia high-end GPUs are in hot demand from tech giants building data centers to power artificial intelligence.
The company said its data center division revenue in the quarter was $39.1 billion, up 10% from the same period last year.However, the market had expected more from the unit, 'Nvidia beat expectations again, but in a market where maintaining this dominance is becoming more challenging,' said Emarketer analyst Jacob Bourne.'The China export restrictions underscore the immediate pressure from geopolitical headwinds, but Nvidia also faces mounting competitive pressure as rivals like AMD gain ground,' said Emarketer analyst Jacob Bourne.
Revenue in Nvidia's gaming chip business hit a record high of $3.8 billion, leaping 48% and eclipsing forecasts.
The AI boom has propelled Nvidia's stock price, which has regained much of the ground lost in a steep sell-off in January triggered by the sudden success of DeepSeek.
China's DeepSeek unveiled its R1 chatbot, which it claims can match the capacity of top U.S. AI products for a fraction of their costs.
'The broader concern is that trade tensions and potential tariff impacts on data center expansion could create headwinds for AI chip demand in upcoming quarters,' analyst Bourne said of Nvidia.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Qatar Tribune
2 days ago
- Qatar Tribune
Syria signs $7 billion power deal with Qatar's UCC Holding-led consortium
Damascus Under the patronage of His Excellency Ahmed Al-Sharaa, President of the Syrian Arab Republic, the Syrian government has signed a strategic Memorandum of Understanding with a consortium of international companies led by UCC Holding to develop major power generation projects, with a foreign investment valued at approximately $7 billion. This initiative aligns with the national agenda to rebuild Syria's core infrastructure, enhance energy security, and support economic development. It reflects the President's clear direction toward establishing a development model based on self-reliance, regional cooperation, and long-term sustainability. The signing ceremony took place in Damascus, in the presence of Mr. Tom Barrack, U. S. Special Envoy for Syria; His Excellency Khalifa Abdullah Al Mahmoud Al Sharif, Chargé d'Affaires at the Qatari Embassy in Damascus; and His Excellency Burhan Koroglu, Turkish Ambassador to Syria. The agreement was signed by Mr. Mohamed Moutaz Al-Khyyat, Chairman of UCC Holding; Mr. Mehmet Cengiz, Chairman of Cengiz Energy; Mr. Orhan Cemal Kalyoncu, Chairman of Kalyon Energy; and Mr. Mazen Al-Sbeti, CEO of Power International USA. The signing was also attended by a number of managers and representatives from the companies, including Mr. Ramez Al-Khyyat, President & CEO of UCC Holding; Mr. Mohamed Al-Khyyat, Board Member of UCC Concessions Investments; Mr. Ahmet Cengiz, Vice Chairman of Cengiz Energy; and Mr. Lutfi Elvan, CEO of Kalyon Energy." The consortium is led by UCC Holding, through its subsidiary UCC Concessions Investment, a Qatari company specializing in energy concessions and Construction. The consortium includes: • Power International USA LLC– American company specializing in strategic energy investments • Kalyon GES Enerji Yatırımları A.Ş. – Turkish renewable energy investor and developer • Cengiz Enerji San. ve Tic. A.Ş. – Turkish energy development and operation company This strategic alliance reflects the vision and leadership of His Highness Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani, Amir of the State of Qatar, in supporting Syria's economic recovery and contributing to the reconstruction of a renewed Syrian state through impactful initiatives aimed at energizing the national economy and advancing the country's path toward power self-sufficiency. The agreement covers the development of four combined-cycle gas turbine (CCGT) power plants in Traifawi (Homs), Zayzoun (Hama), Deir-Azzour, and Mehardeh (Hama), with an approximate installed generation capacity of 4,000 MW, using American and European technologies, and a 1,000 MW solar power plant in Wedian Alrabee, located in the southern region of Syria. These projects will be implemented under Build-Own-Operate (BOO) and Build-Operate-Transfer (BOT) models with the corresponding power purchase agreements. Construction is expected to begin following final agreements and financial close, with completion targeted within 3 years for the gas plants and less than 2 years for the solar plant. Mr. Tom Barrack, USSpecial Envoy for Syria, said: "This agreement represents a landmark step in Syria's path to reconstruction and energy security. As President Trump said, we are working with our partners for a prosperous and stable Syria at peace with itself and its neighbours. This partnership is a key step towards that goal, along with the President's lifting of U.S. sanctions against Syria. This consortium, led by Qatar, will promote stability, infrastructure development, and economic recovery and deliver tangible results for the Syrian people. As President Trump has said, and Secretary Rubio is implementing, our goal is to enable 'commerce, not chaos.' His Excellency Mohammed Al Bashir, Minister of Energy of the Syrian Arab Republic, said: "This agreement marks a crucial step in Syria's infrastructure recovery plan. It will strengthen our national grid, expand access to electricity, and help meet growing demand through partnerships that combine international expertise with local priorities." MrRamez Al Khayyat, President and Group CEO of UCC Holding, said: 'This MoU reflects our vision for sustainable and impactful infrastructure development in the region. We are proud to lead this initiative through our concession arm, in collaboration with our consortium partners. These projects represent a model of effective public-private partnership, integrating both conventional and renewable power solutions to support Syria's energy transition and long-term economic resilience. Cemal Kalyoncu, the Chairman of Kalyon Holding, stated: "As Türkiye's largest investor in renewable energy, we are proud to contribute to the development and improvement of the infrastructure of our neighboring country, Syria, through this project." MrMehmet Cengiz, Chairman of Cengiz Holding, said: "As leading private energy companies in Türkiye, we bring a quarter-century of experience in building and operating power facilities across multiple regions. We are confident this partnership will deliver reliable and efficient power solutions for Syria." Upon completion, the projects are expected to supply over 50% of Syria's national electricity needs, representing a transformative leap toward energy security, economic revival, and infrastructure resilience. This initiative goes beyond grid stability, aiming to deliver widespread social and economic impact through: • End power shortages by increasing generation capacity to meet the growing demand of households, industries, and businesses. • Drive economic growth by providing reliable energy to critical sectors such as industry, agriculture, healthcare, and education. • Create thousands of jobs in construction, engineering, and long-term operations, contributing to workforce development. • Improve daily life through enhanced public services, education systems, and overall quality of life. • Enable regional integration by opening channels for future cross-border energy trade. • Support the transition to renewables by laying the foundation for large-scale solar and clean energy projects. Together, these developments mark a pivotal contribution to Syria's rebuilding journey and long-term prosperity.


Qatar Tribune
2 days ago
- Qatar Tribune
Nvidia earnings top expectations despite United States export curbs
Agencies Chip giant Nvidia on Wednesday reported earnings that surpassed market expectations, with a $4.5 billion hit from U.S. export controls being less than the company had feared. However, Nvidia CFO Colette Kress warned in an earnings call that export constraints are expected to cost the AI chip titan about $8 billion in the current quarter. In April, Nvidia notified regulators that it expected a $5.5 billion hit in the recently ended quarter due to a new U.S. licensing requirement on the primary chip it can legally sell in China. U.S. officials had told Nvidia that it must obtain licenses to export its H20 chips to China because of concerns they may be used in supercomputers there, the company said in a Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) filing. The new licensing rule applies to Nvidia graphics processing units, or GPUs, with bandwidth similar to that of the H20. 'China is one of the world's largest AI markets and a springboard to global success,' Nvidia chief executive Jensen Huang said in an earnings call. 'The platform that wins China is positioned to lead globally; however, the $50 billion China market is effectively closed to us.' Nvidia cannot dial back the capabilities of its H20 chips any further to comply with U.S. export constraints, winding up forced to write off billions of dollars on inventory that can't be sold or repurposed, according to Huang. 'The U.S. has based its policy on the assumption that China cannot make AI chips,' Huang said.'That assumption was always questionable and now it's clearly wrong.' China's AI is moving on without Nvidia technology, while that country's chip-makers innovate products and ramp up operations, according to Huang. 'The question is not whether China will have AI; it already does,' he said. 'The question is whether one of the world's largest markets will run on American platforms.' The new requirements resulted in Nvidia incurring a charge of $4.5 billion in the quarter, associated with H20 excess inventory and purchase obligations, 'as demand for H20 diminished,' the chipmaker said in an earnings report. U.S. export constraints stopped Nvidia from bringing in an additional $2.5 billion worth of H20 revenue in the quarter, according to the said it made a profit of $18.8 billion on revenue of $44.1 billion, causing shares to rise more than 4% in after-market trades. Hot demand Huang said demand for the company's AI-powering technology remains strong, and a new Blackwell NVL72 AI supercomputer referred to as a 'thinking machine' is in full-scale production. 'Countries around the world are recognizing AI as essential infrastructure – just like electricity and the internet – and Nvidia stands at the center of this profound transformation,' Huang said. Nvidia high-end GPUs are in hot demand from tech giants building data centers to power artificial intelligence. The company said its data center division revenue in the quarter was $39.1 billion, up 10% from the same period last the market had expected more from the unit, 'Nvidia beat expectations again, but in a market where maintaining this dominance is becoming more challenging,' said Emarketer analyst Jacob Bourne.'The China export restrictions underscore the immediate pressure from geopolitical headwinds, but Nvidia also faces mounting competitive pressure as rivals like AMD gain ground,' said Emarketer analyst Jacob Bourne. Revenue in Nvidia's gaming chip business hit a record high of $3.8 billion, leaping 48% and eclipsing forecasts. The AI boom has propelled Nvidia's stock price, which has regained much of the ground lost in a steep sell-off in January triggered by the sudden success of DeepSeek. China's DeepSeek unveiled its R1 chatbot, which it claims can match the capacity of top U.S. AI products for a fraction of their costs. 'The broader concern is that trade tensions and potential tariff impacts on data center expansion could create headwinds for AI chip demand in upcoming quarters,' analyst Bourne said of Nvidia.


Qatar Tribune
2 days ago
- Qatar Tribune
US trade court blocks Trump's tariffs, cites he exceeded powers
Agencies A U.S. trade court blocked most of President Donald Trump's tariffs in a ruling Wednesday that found the president overstepped his authority by imposing across-the-board duties on imports from U.S. trading partners. The news boosted markets on Thursday, even as the White House appealed against the decision by 'unelected judges.' The Court of International Trade said the U.S. Constitution gives Congress exclusive authority to regulate commerce with other countries that is not overridden by the president's emergency powers to safeguard the U.S. economy. It said that the court does not read the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) to confer such 'unbounded authority.' 'The court does not pass upon the wisdom or likely effectiveness of the president's use of tariffs as leverage,' a three-judge panel said in the decision to issue a permanent injunction on the blanket tariff orders issued by Trump since January. 'That use is impermissible not because it is unwise or ineffective, but because federal law does not allow it.' This opinion marks a significant setback for Trump as he bids to redraw the U.S. trade relationship with the world by forcing governments to negotiate at the table through tough new tariffs. Trump's global trade war has roiled financial markets with a stop-start rollout of import levies to punish economies that sell more to the U.S. than they buy. Trump argued that the resulting trade deficits and the threat posed by the influx of drugs constituted a 'national emergency' that justified widespread tariffs. But the three-judge Court of International Trade ruled that Trump had overstepped his authority, barring most of the restrictions announced since he took office in January. The White House slammed the ruling, arguing that 'unelected judges' have no right to weigh in on Trump's handling of the issue. 'President Trump pledged to put America first, and the administration is committed to using every lever of executive power to address this crisis and restore American greatness,' Trump's spokesperson, Kush Desai, said. Attorneys for the Trump administration promptly filed to appeal against the ruling on Wednesday. One of Trump's closest White House aides, Stephen Miller, took to social media to decry a 'judicial coup' that he said was 'out of control.' Trump unveiled sweeping import duties on most trading partners on April 2, at a baseline 10% plus steeper levies on dozens of economies, including China and the European Union. The ruling also quashes duties that Trump imposed on Canada, Mexico and China separately using emergency powers. Some of the turmoil was calmed after he paused the larger tariffs for 90 days and suspended other duties, pending negotiations with individual countries and blocs. Asian markets rallied on Thursday after the ruling, while European and U.S. futures also pointed to early gains. Japan's tariffs envoy Ryosei Akazawa said as he left for a fourth round of talks in Washington that Tokyo – reeling from tariffs on cars – would study the ruling. The judges also ordered the Trump administration to issue new orders reflecting the permanent injunction within 10 days. The Trump administration, minutes later, filed a notice of appeal and questioned the authority of the court. The court invalidated with immediate effect all of Trump's orders on tariffs since January that were rooted in the IEEPA, a law meant to address 'unusual and extraordinary' threats during a national emergency. The court was not asked to address some industry-specific tariffs Trump has issued on automobiles, steel and aluminum, using a different statute. The decisions of the Manhattan-based Court of International Trade, which hears disputes involving international trade and customs laws, can be appealed to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit in Washington, D.C., and ultimately the U.S. Supreme Court. The federal trade court ruled in two separate cases – brought by businesses and a coalition of state governments – arguing that the president had violated Congress's power of the purse. 'The question in the two cases before the court is whether the International Emergency Economic Powers Act of 1977 (IEEPA) delegates these powers to the president in the form of authority to impose unlimited tariffs on goods from nearly every country in the world,' the three-judge panel wrote in an unsigned opinion. 'The court does not read IEEPA to confer such unbounded authority and sets aside the challenged tariffs imposed thereunder.' The court, which adjudicates civil cases arising from trade disputes, said that any interpretation of the IEEPA that 'delegates unlimited tariff authority is unconstitutional,' according to court documents. The IEEPA authorizes the president to impose necessary economic sanctions during an emergency 'to combat an unusual and extraordinary threat,' the bench ruling gave the White House 10 days to complete the bureaucratic process of halting the tariffs. Gregory W. Meeks, the top Democrat on the House Foreign Affairs Committee, said the ruling confirmed that 'these tariffs are an illegal abuse of executive power.' 'Trump's declaration of a bogus national emergency to justify his global trade war was an absurd and unlawful use of IEEPA,' he said. The Justice Department has defended Trump's trade strategy in court, insisting that the judiciary has very limited authority over his actions and sparking criticism that the White House was attempting to usurp the power of the other branches of government. Trump has claimed that Americans will reap the benefits of his trade posture, pointing to early successes in deals struck with the U.K. and with China, the world's second-largest economy. However, analysts warned that the cost of the tariffs will likely be passed on to U.S. consumers, raising inflation and potentially leading the U.S. central bank to hold interest rates higher for longer, further affecting financial markets. Companies of all sizes have been whipsawed by Trump's swift imposition of tariffs and sudden reversals as they seek to manage supply chains, production, staffing and prices. If it stands, the ruling blows a giant hole through Trump's strategy to use steep tariffs to wring concessions from trading partners. It creates deep uncertainty around multiple simultaneous negotiations with the EU, China and many other countries. However, analysts at Goldman Sachs noted the order does not block sector-specific levies and there were other legal avenues for Trump to impose across-the-board and country-specific tariffs.