
Nvidia, AMD to pay 15% of China chip revenues to US, official says
Top chipmakers Nvidia and AMD have agreed to give the U.S. government 15% of revenue from sales of their advanced computer chips to China, a U.S. official said on Sunday, in an unusual move likely to stir confusion among American companies.
U.S. President Donald Trump's administration halted sales of H20 chips to China in April, but Nvidia announced last month that Washington had said it would allow the company to resume sales and it hoped to start deliveries soon.
Another U.S. official said on Friday the Commerce Department had begun issuing licenses for the sale of H20 artificial intelligence chips to China.
Both the U.S. officials declined to be named because details have not been made public.
The new levy could also hurt margins for the two companies, analysts warned. Shares of Nvidia and AMD fell about 1% and nearly 2%, respectively, in premarket trade on Monday.
The deal to pay the U.S. government from sales in China is unusual for a president and marks Trump's latest intervention in corporate decision-making.Trump harangues company executives to invest in America to shore up domestic jobs and manufacturing. Last week, he demanded that new Intel CEO Lip-Bu Tan immediately resign, calling him 'highly conflicted' due to his ties to Chinese firms.
The U.S. official said the Trump administration did not believe the sale of H20 and equivalent chips compromised national security.
'It's wild,' said Geoff Gertz, a senior fellow at the Center for New American Security, an independent think tank in Washington, D.C.
'Either selling H20 chips to China is a national security risk, in which case we shouldn't be doing it to begin with, or it's not a national security risk, in which case, why are we putting this extra penalty on the sale?'
When asked if Nvidia had agreed to pay 15% of revenues to the U.S., an Nvidia spokesperson said in a statement: 'We follow the rules the U.S. 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.'
Nvidia has warned that being unable to supply H20 chips to China could slice $8 billion off sales from its July quarter, while AMD had forecast a $1.5 billion hit to revenue this year owing to the curbs.
AMD did not respond to a request for comment on the news that was first reported by the Financial Times (FT) earlier on Sunday.
'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 look like a logical move on paper,' AJ Bell investment director Russ Mould said.
'That said, it is unprecedented and there is always the risk that the revenue take could be upped or that the Trump administration changes its mind and re-imposes export controls.' The U.S. Department of Commerce did not immediately respond to a request for comment.China's foreign ministry, approached for comment on Monday, said the country had repeatedly expressed its position on the issue of U.S. chip exports.
The ministry in the past has accused the U.S. of using technology and trade issues to 'maliciously contain and suppress China.'
The FT reported that the chipmakers agreed to the arrangement as a condition for obtaining export licenses for their semiconductors, including AMD's MI308 chips. The report stated that the Trump administration had yet to determine how to utilize the funds.
U.S. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick said last month the planned resumption of sales of the AI chips was part of U.S. negotiations with China to get rare earths and described the H20 as Nvidia's 'fourth-best chip' in an interview with CNBC.
Lutnick said it was in the U.S. interests to have Chinese companies using American technology, even if the most advanced was prohibited from export, so they continued to use an American 'tech stack.'
The U.S. official who spoke about the 15% levy stated that they did not know when the agreement would be implemented, nor exactly how, but assured that the administration would be in compliance with the law.
Alasdair Phillips-Robins, who served as an adviser at the Commerce Department during the administration of former President Joe Biden, criticized the move.
'If this reporting is accurate, it suggests the administration is trading away national security protections for revenue for the Treasury,' Phillips-Robins said.
Nvidia generated $17 billion in revenue from China in the fiscal year ending Jan. 26, representing 13% of total sales. AMD reported $6.2 billion in revenue from China for 2024, accounting for 24% of its total revenue.
Giving away some revenue from these chips to the U.S. government would reduce the gross margins for these processors by 5 to 15 percentage points, resulting in an impact of 'a point or so' on their overall gross margins, Bernstein analysts said in a note.
Hashtags

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


Al Jazeera
2 hours ago
- Al Jazeera
Trump touts second trilateral meeting before Putin summit; Zelenskyy pushes
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has reiterated that there should be no peace talks to end the Russia-Ukraine war now in its fourth year without representation from his country, and also said Russia should face sanctions if it does not agree to an immediate ceasefire, following a virtual meeting between him, United States President Donald Trump and European leaders. Zelenskyy delivered the message after the call on Wednesday, two days ahead of a summit between Trump and his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin in Alaska, which comes as part of Washington's so far failed attempts to end the war in Ukraine. Meanwhile, Trump promised to hold trilateral talks with both Ukraine and Russia, if Friday's summit 'goes OK'. 'I would like to do it immediately,' he said. 'We'll have a quick second meeting between President Putin and President Zelenskyy and myself if they'd like to have me there.' The rapid developments came after Trump met virtually with Zelenskyy and other European leaders including France's Emmanuel Macron and the United Kingdom's Keir Starmer on Wednesday. Arranged in a bid for Europe to try and influence Trump's meeting with Putin on Friday, this second call took place after talks earlier in the day between Zelenskyy, European leaders and the heads of NATO and the European Union. Trump and European leaders called their joint meeting a success, with the US president describing it as a 'very good call'. 'I would rate it a 10. Very friendly,' he said, speaking during a press conference at the Kennedy Center. Trump noted that he would be calling Zelenskyy and European leaders immediately following his meeting with Putin. At a press conference with German Chancellor Friedrich Merz, Zelenskyy expressed his hope that the Trump-Putin summit would focus on an 'immediate ceasefire'. 'Sanctions must be in place and must be strengthened if Russia does not agree to a ceasefire,' he added. As the Russian army continues to make sizable territorial gains in the east Ukrainian province of Donetsk, Zelenskyy told the US president and his European colleagues that Putin was 'bluffing' about pursuing peace. His choice of words, a term commonly used in reference to poker, evoked Trump telling Zelenskyy, 'you don't have the cards' in the infamously hostile news conference at the White House on February 28th. 'He is trying to apply pressure before the meeting in Alaska along all parts of the Ukrainian front,' Zelenskyy suggested. 'Russia is trying to show that it can occupy all of Ukraine.' After the Trump call, Merz, who described the meeting as 'exceptionally constructive', stressed that Ukraine is willing to negotiate, but noted that 'legal recognition of Russian occupation is not up for debate'. 'The principle that borders cannot be changed by force must continue to apply,' Merz said. 'Negotiations must include robust security guarantees for Kyiv,' he added. 'The Ukrainian armed forces must be able and remain able to effectively defend the sovereignty of their country. They must also be able to count on Western aid in the long term.' After the online meeting, France's Macron said Trump would be seeking a ceasefire in Ukraine during his meeting with Putin on Friday. The US president would also seek a trilateral meeting with Putin and Zelenskyy in the future, the French president noted. The Trump-Putin summit in Alaska has been a cause for anxiety in Kyiv and Europe more widely, after Trump declared that both Ukraine and Russia would have to swap land if a truce is to be reached. Speaking from the UK on Wednesday, JD Vance, the US vice-president, seemed to try to allay fears in Europe. 'I just talked to him [Trump] right before I came on the stage, and he said very simply that we are going to make it our mission as an administration to bring peace to Europe once again,' Vance said. Reporting from Berlin, Al Jazeera's Step Vaessen said there was 'some optimism' in Europe that Trump had agreed to Wednesday's meeting. However, Vaessen noted that European leaders were still 'concerned that everything changes as soon as President Trump is in that room with President Putin, who they know is a very keen, a very sharp negotiator'. Elsewhere, the Russian Foreign Ministry sought to downplay the relevance of Europe's last-minute diplomatic efforts with Trump, branding them 'practically insignificant'. On the battlefield, Russia has claimed to have captured the villages of Suvorovo and Nikanorovka as its gains in Donetsk continue, with the Ukrainian authorities issuing evacuation orders for around a dozen settlements. The Kremlin's forces achieved their largest 24-hour advance in more than a year on Tuesday, according to data from the US-based Institute for the Study of War.


Al Jazeera
2 hours ago
- Al Jazeera
Donald Trump names Kiss, Sylvester Stallone as Kennedy Center Honors picks
United States President Donald Trump has unveiled his slate of picks for the Kennedy Center Honors, an annual awards show designed to honour actors, musicians, designers and creative professionals who have dedicated their lives to the performing arts. On Wednesday, Trump appeared on stage at the John F Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, one of the premier stages in Washington, DC, in a show of power over the national cultural institution. 'We'll make it better than it ever was, frankly,' he said of the awards show. ' It'll be something that people are going to be very proud of.' This year's five honourees include disco singer Gloria Gaynor, country music musician George Strait, the rock band Kiss, British performer Michael Crawford and actor Sylvester Stallone, star of the classic films Rocky and Rambo. Trump, a former reality TV star, also revealed that he would host the award show himself. In his opening remarks, he suggested his allies strong-armed him into taking the hosting gig. 'I've been asked to host. I said, 'I'm the president of the United States. Are you fools asking me to do that?'' Trump said. ' So I have agreed to host. Do you believe what I have to do?' Wednesday's announcement was Trump's latest foray into the arts, as he seeks to reshape the US's cultural institutions to reflect his agenda. During Trump's first term, from 2017 to 2021, the Republican leader never attended the Kennedy Center Honors, breaking with a longtime presidential tradition. Since the ceremony's beginnings in 1978, presidents have been regular attendees, except in rare cases, including Cold War-era negotiations and the 1979 Iran hostage crisis. But since returning to the White House for a second term in January, Trump has not only sought to make his presence known at the Kennedy Center, but he has sought to wield power over its programming. On February 7, Trump announced he would purge the Kennedy Center's governing board and declared his intention to lead the institution as its chair. 'I have decided to immediately terminate multiple individuals from the Board of Trustees, including the Chairman, who do not share our Vision for a Golden Age in Arts and Culture,' Trump wrote at the time. 'We will soon announce a new Board, with an amazing Chairman, DONALD J. TRUMP!' By February 12, the new Kennedy Center board had made good on its promise to elect Trump as chair. Since then, Trump has expanded his reach into the country's arts and culture spheres. On Tuesday, for instance, his administration revealed it would undertake an 'internal review' of several Smithsonian museums, to 'ensure alignment with the President's directive to celebrate American exceptionalism'. Trump also teased his new vision for the Kennedy Center Honors — and appeared to troll critics who expressed outrage over Republican proposals to rename the performing arts center after the Republican leader. 'GREAT Nominees for the TRUMP/KENNEDY CENTER, whoops, I mean, KENNEDY CENTER, AWARDS,' Trump wrote on social media in the lead-up to Wednesday's announcement. He pledged the revamped award show would reflect 'the absolute TOP LEVEL of luxury, glamour, and entertainment'. The Kennedy Center Honors is expected to air on the TV channel CBS in December, and it broadcasts from its eponymous theatre. In Wednesday's speech, Trump tied the upcoming ceremony to his broader campaign to crack down on crime in Washington, DC. ' In the coming months, we'll fully renovate the dated and, really, the entire infrastructure of the building and make the Kennedy Center a crown jewel of American arts and culture once again,' he said. ' We have the right location and soon we will be a crime-free area.' Earlier this week, Trump invoked the capital's Home Rule Act to take control of the local police force and deployed members of the National Guard to patrol the city's streets, despite the fact that violent crime in the city was at a 30-year low. Trump, however, has denied the legitimacy of those statistics, a claim he made again at the Kennedy Center on Wednesday. ' You're gonna see a big change in Washington crime stats very soon — not the stats that they gave because they turned out to be a total fraud. The real stats,' he said. The Republican leader also hinted at potential political bent to the reimagined Kennedy Center Honors. He has previously denounced the Kennedy Center's programming, pledging to cancel performances including drag shows and book classic Broadway hits instead. In response, the touring Broadway production of the hit musical Hamilton cancelled its scheduled stop at the Kennedy Center, as did comedian Issa Rae and the opera Fellow Travelers. Performers in a touring production of Les Miserables also boycotted shows to protest Trump's changes. 'I shouldn't make this political because they made the Academy Awards political and they went down the tubes,' Trump said on Wednesday. 'They'll say, 'Trump made it political,' but I think if we make it our kind of political, we'll go up, OK? Let's see if I'm right about that.'


Al Jazeera
2 hours ago
- Al Jazeera
Trump nominee to lead labour statistics agency faces wave of criticism
EJ Antoni, United States President Donald Trump's nominee to lead the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the agency that produces the nation's jobs and inflation data, has been embroiled in criticism from economists. Antoni was chief economist at the conservative Heritage Foundation and an author of Project 2025, the far-right wish list the think tank created for then-candidate Trump – or the next Republican president. His selection threatens to bring a new level of politicisation to a producer of measurements of the nation's economic health that has, for decades, been widely regarded as a nonpartisan and reliable agency. 'Trump has nominated a sycophant to tell him exactly what he wants to hear. Make no mistake: This selection is a clear assault on independent analysis that will have far-reaching implications for the reliability of US economic data,' Alex Jaquez, a member of the White House National Economic Council under former President Joe Biden, said in a statement provided to Al Jazeera. Many former Labor Department officials say that while it is unlikely Antoni will be able to distort or alter the data, particularly in the short run, he could change the currently dry-as-dust way it is presented. Antoni was nominated by Trump after the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) released a jobs report on August 1 that showed that hiring had weakened in July and was much lower in May and June than the agency had previously reported. Trump, without evidence, charged that the data had been 'rigged' for political reasons and fired the then-BLS chair, Erika McEntarfer, much to the dismay of many within the agency and the broad condemnation of experts. 'Firing officials for reporting accurate data unflattering to the regime is straight out of the authoritarian playbook. It is an attempt to mislead the American people, to avoid being held to account for their failures, and to rewrite history,' Vanessa Williamson, senior fellow at the Urban-Brookings Tax Policy Center, said in a statement provided to Al Jazeera. Antoni's nomination comes as Trump continues to spin fabrications throughout the US economic data, including claiming gas prices are lower than they are and that egg prices have fallen 400 percent – a mathematically impossible figure. Government data critic Antoni has been a vocal critic of the government's jobs data in frequent appearances on podcasts and cable TV. His partisan commentary is unusual for someone who may end up leading the BLS. On August 4, a week before he was nominated, Antoni said in an interview on Fox News Digital that the Labor Department should stop publishing the monthly jobs reports until its data collection processes improve, and rely on quarterly data based on actual employment filings with state unemployment offices. The monthly employment reports are probably the most closely watched economic data on Wall Street, and can frequently cause swings in stock prices. When asked at Tuesday's White House briefing whether the jobs report would continue to be released, press secretary Karoline Leavitt said the administration hoped it would be. 'I believe that is the plan and that's the hope,' Leavitt said. Leavitt also defended Antoni's nomination, calling him an 'economic expert' who has testified before Congress and adding that, 'the president trusts him to lead this important department.' Yet Antoni's TV and podcast appearances have created more of a portrait of a conservative ideologue, instead of a careful economist who considers tradeoffs and prioritises getting the math correct. 'There's just nothing in his writing or his resume to suggest that he's qualified for the position, besides that he is always manipulating the data to favour Trump in some way,' said Brian Albrecht, chief economist at the International Center for Law and Economics, told The Associated Press. Antoni wrongly claimed in the last year of Biden's presidency that the economy had been in recession since 2022; he called on the entire Federal Reserve board to be fired for not earning a profit on its Treasury securities holdings; and posted a chart on social media that conflated timelines to suggest inflation was headed to 15 percent. His argument that the US was in a recession rested on a vastly exaggerated measure of housing inflation, based on newly purchased home prices, to artificially make the nation's gross domestic product appear smaller than it was. 'This is actually maybe the worst Antoni content I've seen yet,' Alan Cole of the centre-right Tax Foundation said on social media, referring to his recession claim. On a 2024 podcast, Antoni wanted to sunset Social Security payments for workers paying into the system, saying that 'you'll need a generation of people who pay Social Security taxes but never actually receive any of those benefits.' As head of the BLS, Antoni would oversee the release of the consumer price index by which Social Security payments are adjusted for inflation. Flawed data Many economists share, to some degree, Antoni's concerns that the government's jobs data has flaws and is threatened by trends such as declining response rates to its surveys. The drop has made the jobs figures more volatile, though not necessarily less accurate over time. 'The stock market moves clearly based on these job numbers, and so people with skin in the game think it's telling them something about the future of their investments,' Albrecht said. 'Could it be improved? Absolutely.' Katharine Abraham, an economist at the University of Maryland who was BLS commissioner under President Bill Clinton, said updating the jobs report's methods would require at least some initial investment. The government could use more modern data sources, she said, such as figures from payroll processing companies, and fill in gaps with surveys. 'There's an inconsistency between saying you want higher response rates and you want to spend less money,' she said, referring to the administration's proposals to cut BLS funding. Still, Abraham and other former BLS commissioners do not think Antoni, if confirmed, would be able to alter the figures. He could push for changes in the monthly press release and seek to portray the numbers in a more positive light. William Beach, who was appointed BLS commissioner by Trump in his first term and also served under Biden, said he is confident that BLS procedures are strong enough to prevent political meddling. He said he did not see the figures until two days before publication when he served as commissioner. 'The commissioner does not affect the numbers,'' Beach said. 'They don't collect the data. They don't massage the data. They don't organise it.' Regarding the odds of rigging the numbers, Beach said, 'I wouldn't put it at complete zero, but I'd put it pretty close to zero.'' It took about six months after McEntarfer was nominated in July 2023 for her to be approved. Antoni will likely face stiff opposition from Democrats, but that may not be enough to derail his appointment. Senator Patty Murray, a senior Democrat from Washington, on Tuesday slammed Antoni as 'an unqualified right-wing extremist' and demanded that the GOP chairman of the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee, Senator Bill Cassidy of Louisiana, hold a confirmation hearing for him.