China, Trump and NVIDIA
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Some administration officials worry China could get access to advanced Nvidia chips and are holding up efforts to iron out the agreement.
Nevertheless, export restrictions imposed by the U.S. government have cost the company billions of dollars in sales. Fortunately, Nvidia shareholders recently got great news from the Trump administration: Applications to resume selling its H20 GPUs in China will be approved by the Commerce Department. Here's what investors should know.
TSMC, the world's main producer of advanced AI chips, is expected to post a 52% jump in second-quarter profit to record levels on Thursday, though U.S. tariffs and a strong Taiwan dollar could weigh on its outlook.
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Investor's Business Daily on MSNDow Jones Futures: Nvidia Chipmaker, Netflix Loom After Trump-Powell Blip; Ferrari Breaks OutDow Jones futures fell slightly after hours, along with S&P 500 futures and Nasdaq futures. United AirlinesUAL reported mixed results late Wednesday. NvidiaNVDA and AMD chipmaker Taiwan SemiconductorTSM headline earnings early Thursday with NetflixNFLX due after the close.
CNBC’s Deirdre Bosa joins 'Money Movers' to discuss Nvidia's win over China users and CEO Jensen Huang's Trump playbook.
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The tech giants said they can resume selling high-end semiconductors to China, in what appears to be a major about-face for the Trump administration.
Donald Trump’s decision to let Nvidia sell powerful artificial intelligence (AI) microchips to China has sparked fears that the technology could be used to boost Beijing’s military. Charles Parton, from the think tank Rusi, said there would “inevitably” be sales of semiconductors “which have the possibility of military use”.
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