The escalating chip war between the U.S. and China hit a new intensity this week when Nvidia Corp. (NVDA) CEO Jensen Huang sat down with President Donald Trump on Wednesday. The topic? How America's semiconductor export restrictions might reshape the entire industry, and whether current policy is helping or hurting U.S. interests.
Huang's message was nuanced. Sure, he told reporters on Capitol Hill that he supports ensuring American companies get "the best and the most and first" when it comes to AI technology. But he drew a hard line against the proposed GAIN AI Act, which would make that priority a legal mandate rather than a policy goal.
According to CNBC, Huang argued the bill would actually damage U.S. interests, and he seemed relieved that lawmakers reportedly dropped it from the annual defense spending package. His concern isn't just about federal overreach though—it's about the regulatory chaos brewing at the state level.
Here's where Huang got particularly animated: the growing patchwork of individual state AI laws. He warned that forcing tech companies to navigate 50 different regulatory frameworks would bring the industry to a standstill and create genuine national security vulnerabilities. His solution? A single federal standard that provides clarity instead of confusion.
President Trump apparently agrees, recently pushing Congress to override state laws with a federal mandate. But House Majority Leader Steve Scalise confirmed Tuesday that the provision doesn't have enough votes to pass this year. So for now, companies are stuck dealing with the state-by-state approach Huang finds so problematic.
The China Problem Gets Worse
While Washington debates policy, Beijing has been taking action. China has effectively locked Nvidia out of its semiconductor market entirely, ending years of dominance in what Huang described as going "from 95% to 0%" market share.
The tactics are comprehensive: Beijing banned foreign AI chips from new state data-center projects, tightened port inspections on semiconductor imports, and set an aggressive goal to triple domestic AI-chip production by 2026. Combined with existing stockpiles of Nvidia GPUs and steadily improving local alternatives, Chinese demand for American chips has essentially collapsed.
Huang's Bold Bet on Global Demand
So how does Nvidia respond to losing an entire major market? Huang's answer is simple: we don't need it anymore. He's projecting between $3 trillion and $4 trillion in global AI infrastructure spending by the end of the decade, a massive bet that booming international demand can completely offset losing China.
The market seems to believe him so far. Nvidia stock gained 34% year-to-date, outperforming the NASDAQ Composite Index's roughly 22% returns and briefly becoming the world's most valuable company this year at a $4.4 trillion valuation.
Industry Pushback on Sanctions Strategy
Huang isn't alone in questioning current U.S. policy. Investor and television personality Kevin O'Leary has been vocal about his concerns that tightening semiconductor sanctions could backfire spectacularly.
O'Leary's argument is counterintuitive but interesting: restricting Nvidia and Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. (AMD) chip exports only accelerates Beijing's push for technological self-reliance. Instead of weakening China's AI capabilities, export controls might just speed up the timeline for domestic alternatives.
His proposed alternative? Sell advanced AI chips globally and keep foreign developers dependent on American hardware. That's how you maintain long-term technological dominance, he argues, not by creating artificial scarcity that motivates competitors to build their own solutions.
Where Policy Stands Now
The debate comes as Washington continues intensifying chip restrictions while China actively pushes Nvidia out of its market. Beijing's combination of foreign chip bans, stricter customs enforcement, and aggressive domestic production targets has dramatically reduced demand for U.S. semiconductors.
The Trump administration recently blocked Nvidia's scaled-down B30A chip, which was specifically designed to comply with existing export restrictions. Meanwhile, major cloud providers have backed the GAIN AI Act to further tighten export controls, despite warnings from industry voices that over-restriction could strengthen Chinese rivals like Huawei rather than weaken them.
It's a genuinely complicated policy question with no obvious right answer. Cut off China too aggressively and you might accelerate their domestic chip development. Keep selling and you risk transferring technology that could be used against U.S. interests. Huang's meeting with Trump suggests these tensions are only going to intensify as both countries fight for semiconductor supremacy.
NVDA Price Action: Nvidia shares were up 0.57% at $180.61 during premarket trading on Thursday.