Tech war: Nvidia warns of sales hit in China from US chip curbs, as tailor-made products take time to develop

US semiconductor giant Nvidia said on Wednesday it was developing new products for China-based customers, but the process would take time because of the need to formulate chips that meet those clients’ requirements without breaking Washington’s export rules.

“It’s a significant process to both design and develop these new products,” said Colette Kress, chief financial officer of Nvidia, during a post-earnings conference call with analysts late on Tuesday (US time). She added that the firm would stay focused on “finding the right balance” for its customers in China in view of the US chip restrictions.

Nvidia earlier this year joined an elite club of US companies with a valuation of more than US$1 trillion, thanks to a surge in demand for its semiconductors supporting artificial-intelligence (AI) systems.

The company’s third-quarter revenues soared 206 per cent year on year to US$18.12 billion, according to financial statements released on Tuesday.

27:21

Biden’s China tech policy goal: a 10 year handicap

Biden’s China tech policy goal: a 10 year handicap

Accelerated AI adoption in industries worldwide pushed sales of the company’s data-centre business up by 279 per cent to US$14.51 billion, outperforming its headline revenue growth for the ninth straight quarter.

But headwinds are mounting for Nvidia in the China market, after the US government in October tightened regulations aimed at undercutting China’s AI development by blocking the country’s access to data-centre chips from the company.

Nvidia now expects its sales to China and other US-restricted destinations, which together contributed about 20 to 25 per cent of its data-centre revenues in the past several quarters, to “decline significantly” in the fourth quarter.

Meanwhile, Nvidia is also working with some customers in China and the Middle East to pursue special licences from the US government to buy the company’s products, according to Kress.

The tightened restrictions, targeting China and other countries of concern, have set a higher bar for exports of advanced chips and certain chip-making equipment capable of making those semiconductors.

US chip export controls expose China’s weak link in the semiconductor supply chain

The new ban on China-bound processors took effect for Nvidia on October 23, nearly a month earlier than the effective date of November 17 originally stated by the US Department of Commerce, according to a stock filing by Nvidia on Tuesday.

China, which also includes Hong Kong, was Nvidia’s third largest single market after the US and Taiwan during the last financial year ended January 29, according to the company’s annual report.

The China market made up 21.5 per cent of Nvidia’s total revenue of US$26.9 billion in the last financial year, down from 26 per cent in the previous year.

Despite uncertainties in the Chinese market, a global AI boom ushered in by OpenAI’s ChatGPT a year ago continued to boost sales of Nvidia’s data-centre chips, which exceeded the firm’s video-gaming market revenues last financial year for the first time.

FOLLOW US ON GOOGLE NEWS

Read original article here

Denial of responsibility! Chronicles Live is an automatic aggregator of the all world’s media. In each content, the hyperlink to the primary source is specified. All trademarks belong to their rightful owners, all materials to their authors. If you are the owner of the content and do not want us to publish your materials, please contact us by email – chronicleslive.com. The content will be deleted within 24 hours.

Leave a Comment