Anabelle Colaco
26 May 2026, 04:25 GMT+10
TAIPEI, Taiwan: Nvidia Chief Executive Officer Jensen Huang said on May 23 that China remains part of the company's projected $200 billion market for central processing units, underscoring Nvidia's long-term confidence in Chinese demand despite ongoing technology tensions between Washington and Beijing.
Speaking to reporters after arriving in Taipei ahead of the Computex trade show, Huang said Nvidia's forecast for the emerging CPU market includes China.
"I would think so," Huang said when asked whether the company's estimate accounted for Chinese demand.
The comments come as Nvidia expands beyond its dominance in graphics processing units, or GPUs, which are widely used to train artificial intelligence models. Demand is increasingly shifting toward "agentic AI" systems that can carry out autonomous tasks, driving broader interest in CPUs.
During Nvidia's earnings call earlier this week, Huang told investors that the company's new "Vera" processors could help unlock a $200 billion CPU market opportunity.
Huang also sought to reassure investors that Nvidia could maintain its rapid growth trajectory through a broad customer base and new products, saying the company expects its flagship AI chips to generate more than $1 trillion in sales.
China remains a major focus despite export restrictions and political tensions surrounding advanced AI technology.
Nvidia has received licenses from the U.S. government allowing it to sell its H200 AI chips to China, but deliveries have not yet begun because Chinese regulatory approval is still pending.
It was reported that the U.S. government had cleared around 10 Chinese firms to buy Nvidia's H200 chips, though no shipments have yet been completed.
"H200 has been licensed to ship to China. It would be terrific to be able to serve that market. The Chinese market is very important. It's very large, of course," Huang said at Taipei's Songshan Airport.
Huang recently accompanied U.S. President Donald Trump on a visit to Beijing for talks with Chinese President Xi Jinping. However, the summit produced no immediate breakthrough for Nvidia's chip sales in China.
Taiwan also remains central to Nvidia's supply chain strategy.
Advanced Micro Devices announced earlier this week that it would invest more than $10 billion in Taiwan's AI sector to strengthen partnerships and expand advanced chip manufacturing capacity.
Asked whether Nvidia planned similar investments, Huang said the company had already provided substantial support to its Taiwanese partners.
"We haven't announced anything in the past, but we've invested in and supported our partners here far more than that," Huang said.
He added that he would meet executives from Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co., the world's largest contract chipmaker and a key Nvidia supplier.
Huang said Nvidia was ramping up production of its Vera Rubin platform, which combines the company's Vera CPU and Rubin GPU technologies, creating "a very busy second half" for Taiwan's electronics supply chain.
The visit also comes amid growing scrutiny over AI chip smuggling.
Taiwanese prosecutors said this week they were investigating three people suspected of illegally exporting AI servers made by Super Micro and equipped with Nvidia chips that are subject to U.S. export restrictions.
Asked what Nvidia could do to prevent such diversion, Huang said the company was "very rigorous" about explaining export laws to partners and expected full compliance.
"Ultimately, Super Micro has to run their own company," Huang said. "I hope that they will enhance and improve their regulation compliance and avoid that from happening in the future."
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