Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang in Shanghai as China weighs H200 AI chip entry after customs block

Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang in Shanghai as China weighs H200 AI chip entry after customs block

January 24, 2026

Shanghai, January 24, 2026, 21:21 GMT+8

  • According to sources familiar with the situation, Jensen Huang is currently in Shanghai for Nvidia’s annual employee celebrations in China.
  • Nvidia is currently awaiting Beijing’s approval before it can sell its H200 AI chip to customers in China
  • Sources say Chinese customs agents have been instructed that the H200 cannot be brought into China

Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang arrived in Shanghai on Saturday while the U.S. chipmaker awaits China’s decision on whether its advanced H200 AI chip can be imported, according to a source familiar with the situation. Reuters

Why it matters now: this ruling could determine Nvidia’s foothold in a crucial market amid strained U.S.-China tech relations and heightened scrutiny from Chinese regulators on top foreign vendors. The H200, Nvidia’s second-strongest AI chip, powers data-center operations for training and running sophisticated AI models. It’s evolved into both a commercial and political battleground.

Demand is picking up noticeably. KeyBanc analyst John Vinh suggested Chinese firms “may be willing to purchase around 1.5 million H200 chips,” which he estimates could generate roughly $30 billion in revenue for Nvidia. TradingView

Huang’s visit isn’t out of the ordinary. Sources familiar with the itinerary say he’ll hit an Nvidia party in Shanghai first, then head to Beijing, Shenzhen, and finally Taiwan.

Nvidia hasn’t commented on the trip, according to the earlier report. The Chinese outlet Tencent News was first to report Huang’s visit to Shanghai.

The bigger hurdle is the chip itself. Nvidia is holding back on selling the H200 to customers in China, awaiting Beijing’s green light—even though Washington has already approved the sale, Reuters reported.

LiveMint reported that Chinese customs officials informed a Shenzhen logistics firm last week that Nvidia’s H200 chips couldn’t enter the country. No explanation was given, nor was it clear if this ban was temporary. The report also noted warnings to some domestic tech companies to avoid buying Nvidia chips and focus on local alternatives. This has led players like Tencent, Alibaba, and ByteDance to consider restricting their Nvidia purchases to only high-performance projects. mint

Investors have been parsing every hint. Nvidia shares climbed 1.5% on Friday following a Bloomberg report that Chinese regulators told Alibaba, Tencent, and ByteDance they might start placing orders for the H200 AI chips, according to a separate Reuters markets story. Reuters

China’s homegrown AI chip makers are stepping up their game. Bloomberg notes that with Nvidia out of the picture, companies like Huawei Technologies and Cambricon Technologies are making noticeable strides. Bloomberg

The risk is straightforward: China might maintain the border block, impose stricter rules on who can buy the chips and for what purposes, or stall approvals to gain leverage in wider negotiations with Washington. For Nvidia, these delays increase the odds that clients turn to local alternatives, even if they favor Nvidia’s ecosystem.

Huang’s trips highlight just how high the stakes are. Reuters revealed he made at least three visits to China last year and met with the country’s commerce minister in July, as Nvidia juggled regulatory hurdles alongside growing competition.

The pressing issue is whether Beijing will formalize the customs message into policy or quietly backtrack, and if Huang’s upcoming visits to Beijing and Shenzhen provide any clearer indication.

Artur Ślesik

Artur Ślesik is a technology and financial markets journalist at Bez-kabli.pl, covering artificial intelligence, semiconductors, technology stocks and emerging innovations. A graduate of Warsaw University of Technology, he combines a technical background with market analysis to explain how new technologies are shaping industries, businesses and investment trends worldwide.

Stock Market Today

  • Pro Medicus Stock Soars Post Echo IQ Deal, Valued at A$1 Billion
    June 26, 2026, 4:15 PM EDT. Pro Medicus (ASX:PME) closed at A$188.88 on June 26, rising 1.9% on the day and 9.3% over the week, fueled by a deal with Echo IQ (ASX:EIQ) valued at A$20 million but generating an effective market cap increase of approximately A$1.03 billion. This deal involves a proposed U.S. reseller agreement for EchoSolv AI tools, with final legal documents expected within 20 business days. Echo IQ will receive A$10 million in secured convertible notes initially, paying 12.5% interest, secured by AI cardiovascular algorithms. The surge reflects investor confidence in Pro Medicus leveraging Visage 7 Cardiology software to expand into AI distribution. Despite being dropped from the S&P/ASX 50 index, the stock gains suggest strong sector interest amid broader market stagnation.