Nvidia says it never told Chinese companies to pay the full amount before receiving its H200 chips. The company responded after an article earlier claimed it had set harsh new payment terms.
In a written statement, a spokesperson said the company βwould never require customers to pay for products they do not receive.β
A source allegedly told Reuters that while advance payment was already part of Nvidiaβs terms in China, buyers usually got the option to place a deposit instead of paying in full. That changed for the H200 chip.
Nvidia got stricter this time. The same person said the company started demanding full payment from Chinese clients because it wasnβt clear whether Beijing would approve the shipments. So if buyers agreed, theyβd be risking their money without knowing if theyβd even get the product.
China looks to approve H200, but blocks military and state buyers
Chinese officials are now planning to allow some imports of the H200 within this quarter, according to people with knowledge of the situation.
They said the chip would be approved only for select commercial use, not for the military, sensitive government offices, state-run firms, or critical infrastructure. If any of those organizations want the chip, their applications will be reviewed one by one.
The rule is similar to Chinaβs other restrictions. Apple devices and Micron chips have faced the same treatment. No official has made a public announcement yet. But people involved in the talks said the internal decisions are already moving forward.
The H200 is not a top-tier chip. It came out in 2023 and began shipping in 2024. It belongs to Nvidiaβs Hopper generation, and itβs behind both the Blackwell and Rubin chips.
That made it acceptable under U.S. policy. In early December, President Donald Trump reversed a previous ban and approved the export, but slapped on a 25% surcharge. That gave Nvidia a shot at getting back into the worldβs largest chip market.
Chinaβs local companies show high demand for Nvidiaβs advanced chips amid geopolitical uncertainties
Last year, Alibaba and ByteDance told Nvidia they want to order more than 200,000 units each, according to a person close to the talks.
Other companies, like DeepSeek, are also interested as theyβre all trying to build faster models to compete with OpenAI and other U.S. tech companies.
But thereβs still a problem. Beijing hasnβt said which buyers count as part of βcritical infrastructure.β That term isnβt defined clearly, and companies like Alibaba or Baidu often work with state clients, just like Amazon or Microsoft do with U.S. federal agencies. So even if theyβre private, they might still get blocked depending on how China sees it.
Nvidia hasnβt spoken directly to Chinese regulators. Executives at the CES tech show in Las Vegas said theyβre waiting for answers.
They confirmed that license requests have already been filed in Washington, and theyβre just waiting on final U.S. approval. They also said demand from China is strong, but no shipments will happen until both governments give the green light.
Back in 2025, Chinaβs government told companies to stay away from Nvidiaβs H20, a weaker AI chip that the U.S. had allowed. Chinaβs cyberspace agency also told Alibaba to stop buying Nvidiaβs RTX Pro 6000D, a workstation chip that could be used for AI systems. At the same time, Beijing started pushing for local chip production and offered $70 billion in new subsidies to boost its industry.
Huang, who runs Nvidia, said the rules set by U.S. policymakers cut the companyβs market share in China from 95% to zero. But he added that the company still expects to grow overall. Back in October, Nvidia said it would make $500 billion from its data center chips by the end of 2026. This week, the company said itβs now likely to beat that estimate.
Nvidia is the top supplier of AI accelerators, the chips that train and run large AI systems. The H200 is still being used, even though itβs not the latest. Local Chinese chipmakers like Huawei and Cambricon grew fast during Nvidiaβs absence. Both companies now say they plan to expand production in 2026.
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