Here's an interesting twist in the ongoing saga of U.S.-China tech competition: Tencent Holdings (TCEHY) has reportedly figured out how to get its hands on Nvidia Corp.'s (NVDA) most powerful Blackwell AI chips, even as American policymakers work overtime to keep that hardware out of Chinese hands. The solution? Don't buy the chips. Just rent computing time from someone else who owns them.
The Japanese Cloud Connection
According to a Financial Times report citing people familiar with the arrangement, Tencent is accessing Nvidia's most advanced Blackwell AI processors through a cloud computing setup in Japan. The chips themselves are physically located in an Osaka-area data center operated by Datasection Inc. (DSCNF), a Japanese company that made a dramatic pivot last year from marketing services into AI infrastructure.
The structure is straightforward: Datasection owns the Nvidia Blackwell B200 processors outright and rents computing capacity to a single major customer, which sources identified as Tencent, through a third-party arrangement. Because the chips never leave Japan and stay outside Chinese borders, the whole thing is considered legal under current export rules.
Still, it's exactly the kind of workaround that sits uncomfortably at the center of geopolitical tensions over AI technology and U.S. export controls. Nvidia, Tencent and Datasection did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
Datasection's Meteoric Growth
Datasection has quickly become one of Asia's largest "neoclouds," which is industry-speak for companies that specialize in renting Nvidia GPUs to major tech firms. The company has locked down more than $1.2 billion in contracts, largely tied to that single customer, covering a significant portion of its initial order of 15,000 Blackwell chips.
Most of Datasection's first batch of chips is reportedly contracted to Tencent for three years, with optional extensions built in. That's a substantial commitment, and it speaks to how badly Chinese tech giants need access to cutting-edge AI hardware.
Why Chinese Companies Are Training AI Abroad
U.S. export restrictions have severely limited China's ability to purchase Nvidia's most powerful AI chips directly. That's pushed major players like Tencent, Alibaba Group (BABA) and ByteDance to get creative. Instead of buying hardware they can't access, they're training AI models overseas and renting computing power from data centers in friendlier jurisdictions.
The Biden administration introduced rules aimed at closing exactly this kind of loophole, but President Donald Trump scrapped those regulations in May. Interestingly, Trump said in November 2025 that the advanced Blackwell AI chip would not be accessible to "other people." Yet earlier this month, Trump decided to allow Nvidia to sell its H200 AI chip to China, adding another layer of confusion to an already complicated policy landscape.
Big Expansion Plans Meet Investor Questions
Datasection isn't stopping with its current setup. The company has announced plans to build AI data centers housing more than 100,000 Nvidia processors across Japan, Australia and potentially Europe. That's an ambitious expansion for a company that was doing marketing services just a couple of years ago.
The market has noticed. Datasection's shares are up sharply this year, though they've fallen from recent highs. Investors are getting nervous about the company's heavy capital spending requirements, and a short-seller attack questioning regulatory compliance hasn't helped matters.
For its part, Tencent told the Financial Times that it fully complies with all applicable laws and that its use of cloud computing services is "transparent and legal." Which is probably true, even if it's not exactly what U.S. policymakers had in mind when they drafted export restrictions.
The Trump Administration Reviews H200 Exports
Last week, the Trump administration launched a formal review that could authorize the first direct shipments of Nvidia's H200 AI chips to China. The U.S. Commerce Department has sent license applications for H200 exports to the State, Energy and Defense Departments, which have 30 days to weigh in under export-control rules. The final decision rests with the president.
In a somewhat ironic twist, reports suggest that Beijing is preparing its own restrictions on Nvidia's advanced H200 chips. Chinese regulators are reportedly considering rules that would require prospective buyers to obtain government approval before purchasing the chips, essentially creating a domestic approval process that mirrors U.S. export controls.
Nvidia's Stellar Performance
Through all this geopolitical maneuvering, Nvidia's stock has climbed 24.41% over the last six months. Over the past five years, shares have surged an eye-popping 1,263.70%. The company consistently ranks in the 97th percentile for growth when compared to peers like AMD and Intel.
The bottom line? When there's enough demand for cutting-edge AI chips, companies will find creative ways to access them, regardless of what export restrictions say. Whether through Japanese cloud providers, overseas data centers or other arrangements, the global AI arms race continues to find ways around political barriers. And as long as that demand persists, expect more of these creative workarounds to emerge.




