Trump weighed Nvidia breakup but was told it would be ‘very hard'
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang speaks alongside US President Donald Trump at the White House on April 30.
NEW YORK - US President Donald Trump said he considered attempting to break up Nvidia to increase competition in artificial intelligence (AI) chips before finding out 'it's not easy in that business.'
'I said, 'Look, we'll break this guy up,' before I learned the facts here,' Mr Trump said on July 23 at an AI summit in Washington. Mr Trump said he was told by aides that doing so was 'very hard' and that the company held a substantial advantage over all competitors that would take years to overcome.
'I figured we could go in and we could sort of break them up a little bit, get them a little competition, and I found out it's not easy in that business,' Mr Trump added.
Nvidia declined to comment.
Mr Trump went on to praise Nvidia chief executive officer Jensen Huang, who was in the audience for his event.
Mr Huang met earlier this month with the president at the White House, and last week the company announced it would be allowed to resume selling its H20 artificial intelligence chips to China as part of a recent trade truce with Beijing. The Trump administration had previously frozen the sale of those chips to China.
'What a job you've done,' Mr Trump said. Throughout his address, the president name-checked and complimented Mr Huang, along with other tech industry leaders, for their investments in the United States.
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Earlier in the day, Mr Huang used his session on stage to praise the president's approach to AI. 'America's unique advantage that no other country can possibly have is President Trump,' Mr Huang said.
Nvidia earlier in July became the
first company ever to surpass US$4 trillion (S$5 trillion) in market capitalisation, as it has profited heavily from the boom in demand for AI hardware to power large language models.
The Justice Department in 2024 conducted an investigation seeking evidence of possible anticompetitive behavior by Nvidia.
Mr Trump at the event unveiled his AI Action Plan, which, paired with a series of executive orders, is designed to aid the industry by reducing regulatory burdens. BLOOMBERG
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