logo
Nvidia working on new AI chip for China that outperforms current model it can sell there: Sources

Nvidia working on new AI chip for China that outperforms current model it can sell there: Sources

Straits Times13 hours ago
Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox
The sources said that US regulatory approval is far from guaranteed however.
BEIJING/SINGAPORE – Nvidia is developing a new artificial intelligence (AI) chip for China based on its latest Blackwell architecture that will be more powerful than the H20 model it is currently allowed to sell there, two people briefed on the matter said.
US President Donald Trump last week
opened the door to the possibility of more advanced Nvidia chips being sold in China.
But the sources noted that US regulatory approval is far from guaranteed amid deep-seated fears in Washington about giving China too much access to US AI technology.
The new chip, tentatively known as the B30A, will use a single-die design that is likely to deliver half the raw computing power of the more sophisticated dual-die configuration in Nvidia's flagship B300 accelerator card, the sources said.
A single-die design is when all the main parts of an integrated circuit are made on one continuous piece of silicon, rather than split across multiple dies.
The new chip would have high-bandwidth memory and Nvidia's NVLink technology for fast data transmission between processors, features that are also in the H20 – a chip based on the company's older Hopper architecture.
The chip's specifications are not completely finalised but Nvidia hopes to deliver samples to Chinese clients for testing as early as next month, said the sources who were not authorised to speak to media and declined to be identified.
Top stories
Swipe. Select. Stay informed.
Singapore What led to Changi Airport runway incident involving 2 China Eastern Airlines planes in Aug 2024
Singapore Fairprice apologises after woman finds worm in salmon bought from Bedok North outlet
Singapore CPIB nabs 9 suspects for alleged match-fixing in national basketball league
Singapore Live Singapore-raised seafood on sale at 3 Giant supermarkets from Aug 19
Singapore Singapore seals carbon credit deal with Thailand, its first South-east Asian partner
Asia Singaporean man sentenced to 72 years' jail in Malaysia for murdering wife and stepson
Singapore Court to assess if teen who advertised vapes for sale on WhatsApp can receive probation
Nvidia said in a statement: 'We evaluate a variety of products for our roadmap so that we can be prepared to compete to the extent that governments allow.'
'Everything we offer is with the full approval of the applicable authorities and designed solely for beneficial commercial use,' it said.
The US Department of Commerce did not respond to a Reuters request for comment.
Flashpoint
The extent to which China, which generated 13 per cent of Nvidia's revenue in the past financial year, can have access to cutting-edge AI chips is one of the biggest flashpoints in US-Sino trade tensions.
Nvidia received permission only in July to restart sales of the H20.
It was developed specifically for China after export restrictions were put in place in 2023, but the company was abruptly ordered to stop sales in April.
Mr Trump said last week he might allow Nvidia to sell a scaled-down version of its next-generation chip in China after announcing an unprecedented deal that will see Nvidia and rival AMD
give the US government 15 per cent of revenue from sales of some advanced chips in China.
A new Nvidia chip for China might have '30 per cent to 50 per cent off', he suggested in an apparent reference to the chip's computing power, adding that the H20 was 'obsolete'.
US legislators, both Democratic and Republican, have worried that access to even scaled-down versions of flagship AI chips will impede US efforts to maintain its lead in AI.
But Nvidia and others argue that it is important to retain Chinese interest in its chips – which work with Nvidia's software tools – so that developers do not completely switch over to offerings from rivals like Huawei.
Huawei has made great strides in chip development, with its latest models said to be on a par with Nvidia in some aspects like computing power, though analysts say it lags in key areas such as software ecosystem support and memory bandwidth capabilities.
Complicating Nvidia's efforts to retain market share in China, Chinese state media have also in recent weeks alleged that the US firm's chips could pose security risks, and the authorities have cautioned Chinese tech firms about buying the H20. Nvidia says its chips carry no backdoor risks.
Nvidia is also preparing to start delivering a separate new China-specific chip based on its Blackwell architecture and designed primarily for AI inference tasks, according to two other people familiar with those plans.
Reuters reported in May that this chip, currently dubbed the RTX6000D, will sell for less than the H20, reflecting weaker specifications and simpler manufacturing requirements.
The chip is designed to fall under thresholds set by the US government. It uses conventional GDDR memory and features memory bandwidth of 1,398 gigabytes per second, just below the 1.4 terabyte threshold established by restrictions introduced in April that led to the initial H20 ban.
Nvidia is set to deliver small batches of RTX6000D to Chinese clients in September, said one of the people. REUTERS
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Europe: Stocks close at five-month highs as investors monitor progress on Ukraine
Europe: Stocks close at five-month highs as investors monitor progress on Ukraine

Business Times

time28 minutes ago

  • Business Times

Europe: Stocks close at five-month highs as investors monitor progress on Ukraine

[BENGALURU] European shares closed at their highest level in more than five months on Tuesday (Aug 19) as investors assessed the chances of an end of the war in Ukraine, following Monday's talks in Washington between US, Ukrainian and European leaders. The pan-European Stoxx 600 index closed 0.7 per cent up. Most major regional bourses also traded firmer. Markets were buoyed by hopes of more talks to resolve Russia's war in Ukraine after US President Donald Trump promised security guarantees for Kyiv at a summit with Ukrainian and a group of European leaders, though there was little clarity on the specifics. He said that arrangements for a trilateral summit between the US, Russia and Ukraine were being made. On Tuesday, Trump said that he hoped Putin would move forward on ending the war but conceded the Kremlin leader may not want to make a deal. European defence stocks fell 2.6 per cent, marking their worst day in over a month, and were the biggest laggards on the Stoxx 600 index. BT in your inbox Start and end each day with the latest news stories and analyses delivered straight to your inbox. Sign Up Sign Up Shares in Italy's Leonardo fell 10.2 per cent, the most on the index. Hensoldt and Renk Group fell 9.5 per cent and 8.3 per cent, respectively, while Rheinmetall was down 4.9 per cent. 'The rest of the market is edging cautiously higher... that really reflects what we think about the prospect of a peace deal – it's likely in some shape or form,' said Nick Saunders, CEO of stock trading platform Webull UK. 'What form that takes is going to be difficult to determine.' Consumer discretionary sectors led broader gains with automobiles and food and beverage stocks up 2.4 per cent and 1.6 per cent, respectively. Luxury stocks surged on a boost from Moncler , up 4.9 per cent, and Burberry rising 5.1 per cent. Meanwhile, the latest forecasts showed a dip in the outlook for European corporate health, marking a change of direction after several weeks of improvement. However, of the 259 Stoxx 600 companies that have reported second-quarter earnings so far, almost 53 per cent have exceeded analyst estimates, LSEG I/B/E/S data showed. The Stoxx 600 has gained almost 10 per cent this year, driven by hopes of higher spending in the bloc, a shift to European assets in the first half of 2025 and rising expectations of a US interest rate cut. However, Saunders did not expect continued capital flow into Europe as global trade war fears had somewhat subsided. The Federal Reserve's annual Jackson Hole symposium will also be in focus this week. Investors will scrutinise any clues from chair Jerome Powell and others on monetary policy, even as a September cut remains priced in. Among other stocks, JD Sports gained 6.9 per cent after Deutsche Bank raised the British sportswear retailer's target price to 100 pence from 85 pence. REUTERS

Wall Street mostly declines as tech names pull back from highs
Wall Street mostly declines as tech names pull back from highs

Straits Times

timean hour ago

  • Straits Times

Wall Street mostly declines as tech names pull back from highs

Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox Traders working on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange, in New York City, on Aug 19. NEW YORK - Wall Streets stocks finished mostly lower on Aug 19, dragged down by tech companies retreating from record highs, while a Home Depot earnings report lifted retailers. The broad-based S&P 500 Index fell 0.6 per cent to 6,411.37, while the tech-focused Nasdaq Composite Index fell 1.5 per cent to 21,314.95. The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose a marginal 10.5 points to 44,922.27, pulling back after hitting a record high on the back of Home Depot's quarterly report. Shares of the home improvement company rose 3.2 per cent after slightly missing analyst expectations but maintaining its full-year forecast. Target, Walmart and Lowes report later in the week, with all eyes on potential impacts on consumers from US President Donald Trump's tariffs. 'The consumer makes up two thirds of the economy and retail earnings give you a good sense of the strength of the consumer,' Mr Adam Sarhan, of 50 Park Investments, said. AI chip-maker Nvidia led a slew of tech stocks facing pressure, falling 3.5 per cent, while Advance Micro Devices dropped 5.4 per cent and software provider Palantir slid over 9 per cent. Microsoft fell 1.4 per cent. Shares of Facebook-parent Meta also fell over 2 per cent after the New York Times reported a major shakeup was forthcoming in its AI division. 'Considerable losses in mega-cap tech names have the S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite facing pressure,' according to analysts. Mr Sarhan said that after hitting all time highs last week, 'the market is pulling back as investors digest a very big... move up.' Traders are also anxiously awaiting Federal Reserve chairman Jerome Powell's remarks on Aug 22 at the Jackson Hole financial gathering, where he may offer clues as to how recent inflation and jobs data impact decision making on rate cuts in September. Mr Powell is expected to be 'cautious' after economic data 'has gotten weaker' since his last remarks, said Mr Sarhan. Traders currently price in an over 80 per cent likelihood that the Fed will cut, after resisting intense pressure from Mr Trump and holding rates steady since last December. 'Just about everybody is saying that the Fed should cut rates... so now it's just a matter of when,' added Mr Sarhan. Policymakers have been cautiously monitoring the effects of Mr Trump's wide-ranging tariffs on the world's biggest economy. The Aug 19 decline followed a tepid session a day earlier, when stocks ended mostly flat as traders awaited the outcome of high-level talks at the White House on Russia's war in Ukraine. AFP

US accepts Brazil's WTO consultation request over tariffs
US accepts Brazil's WTO consultation request over tariffs

Straits Times

timean hour ago

  • Straits Times

US accepts Brazil's WTO consultation request over tariffs

SAO PAULO - The United States has accepted a request for consultations from Brazil at the World Trade Organization regarding tariffs it imposed on its goods, even as it argued the levies are a matter of national security, according to a document posted on the WTO website. President Donald Trump slapped a 50% tariff on most Brazilian imports earlier this month, in response to what he has called a "witch hunt" against his Brazilian ally, former President Jair Bolsonaro, who is on trial on charges of plotting a coup following his election loss in 2022. In the document submitted to the WTO on Monday, the U.S. argues that certain requests from Brazil relate to issues of national security, which are "political matters not susceptible to review or capable of resolution by WTO dispute settlement." The tariffs, the document added, were necessary because recent policies and practices of Brazil are "undermining the rule of law and threatening the national security, foreign policy, and economy of the United States." REUTERS

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store