China’s AI rise fuels Nvidia’s comeback, TSMC’s record quarter
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A convergence of policy maneuvering and strategic diplomacy has allowed two of the semiconductor industry’s biggest players, Nvidia and Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company, to reassert dominance in the AI market, even amid tightening US–China technology controls. Nvidia secured a rare export license for its H20 chip after diplomatic overtures and trade recalibrations, while TSMC posted a record quarterly profit driven by accelerating AI demand.
How Nvidia secured export licenses for its H20 chips
In April 2025, Nvidia was blocked from exporting advanced AI chips to China due to tightened US controls targeting national security concerns. By July, however, the company had resumed shipments of the H20 processor, a less powerful variant tailored for the Chinese market. The turnaround followed a series of behind-the-scenes negotiations involving Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang and members of the Trump administration.
An agreement reportedly included Chinese concessions on rare-earth mineral exports, a trade-off that aligned both political and economic interests. Huang positioned the H20 chip as a compromise: sufficiently capable to meet China’s commercial needs while staying within US compliance parameters. Nvidia’s engineering pivot was strategic, allowing it to retain market share in a critical region without violating federal export limits.
Jensen Huang’s Beijing tour and positive rhetoric
Just days after the export clearance, Huang visited Beijing, receiving what local outlets described as a rock star welcome. He praised the country’s AI engineers for their innovative spirit and celebrated China’s progress in open-source model development. His appearance at key tech universities and startup hubs symbolized more than corporate outreach. It was a statement of intent. Nvidia also introduced the RTX Pro series, designed for China’s AI data centers, emphasizing its long-term commitment to serving domestic clients within regulatory bounds.
Beyond product announcements, Huang’s tour aligned with broader strategic goals: improving sentiment, managing geopolitical risk, and building demand ahead of fresh supply. His optimistic tone contrasted with the caution that defined Nvidia’s public stance just months earlier.
TSMC’s Q2 2025 results reflect AI boom and looming headwinds
TSMC, the world’s largest contract chipmaker, delivered quarterly earnings that validated the semiconductor sector’s renewed momentum. The firm posted net income of NT$398.3 billion, approximately $13.5 billion, up 60.7 percent from a year earlier. Revenue came in at $31.9 billion, comfortably beating forecasts, fueled by demand for high-end AI processors used in data centers and autonomous systems.
Despite these gains, TSMC flagged caution. Rising trade protectionism, particularly revived Trump-era tariffs, and currency volatility posed challenges to its forward guidance. The Taiwan dollar’s recent appreciation trimmed overseas profit margins, prompting the company to maintain conservative expectations for the next quarter. Still, TSMC’s outlook remains optimistic. Executives highlighted that AI customers now represent more than 50 percent of its advanced node capacity bookings, underscoring a structural shift in chip demand.
Strategic and geopolitical implications
The synchrony between Nvidia’s regained China market access and TSMC’s robust financials illustrates the interconnected nature of global semiconductor supply. Both firms stand to benefit from China’s rapidly growing compute demand, particularly as domestic AI models scale in sophistication. Yet the backdrop remains complex.
US export controls, designed to prevent Chinese military applications, are now entangled with broader trade dynamics, including rare-earth access and regional manufacturing dependency. Critics in Congress have already called for investigations into the rationale behind Nvidia’s license, citing potential national security oversights.
Meanwhile, China continues to diversify its semiconductor ecosystem, investing heavily in domestic foundries, chip design startups, and large-language-model infrastructure. The availability of H20 chips may ease short-term constraints but could accelerate Beijing’s push toward self-sufficiency.
For Nvidia, the H20 represents both a tactical win and a strategic tightrope. Any future changes in Washington could again disrupt its China strategy, especially if enforcement tightens. AMD, Intel, and Chinese firms like Biren Tech remain in close pursuit, eager to fill any regulatory or performance gaps.
TSMC’s path is also not without risk. The company’s exposure to US market cycles and trade legislation leaves it vulnerable to shifts in political mood. As competitors in Japan, South Korea, and the United States increase local production capacity, TSMC must defend its dominance without becoming overly reliant on geopolitically sensitive contracts.
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