Nvidia’s Jensen Huang: China ‘Nanoseconds Behind’ US in Semiconductor Race as Domestic Rivals Surge
US chip export restrictions spur an arms race, as Chinese giants increase their investment and innovation to close the gap with global leader Nvidia.

China’s Rapid Ascent in the AI Chip Race
China is now only “nanoseconds behind” the United States in the pursuit of next-generation semiconductors, according to Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang. In a recent appearance on the ‘BG2’ podcast hosted by Brad Gerstner and Bill Gurley, Huang emphasized the pressing need for competitive markets worldwide, warning that restricting US companies from competing in China risks ceding ground to ambitious domestic players.
“This is a vibrant, entrepreneurial, hi-tech, modern industry,” said Huang, referencing China’s extraordinary growth and deep talent pool across its sprawling provinces. He urged policymakers in both Beijing and Washington to allow foreign investment and open market competition, stating that such vibrancy would benefit both economies and spark greater innovation.
His comments come as the US continues to tighten restrictions on the export of advanced semiconductors to China, citing national security concerns and the desire to limit Chinese advances in artificial intelligence.
US Curbs Escalate, But Nvidia Still Eyes Opportunity
Nvidia, now the world’s most valuable chipmaker with a market capitalization surpassing $2.5 trillion in 2025, has found itself at the heart of US-China tech tensions. In October 2023, the Biden administration expanded restrictions, blocking the shipment of Nvidia’s top AI accelerators, including the A100, H100, and even its customized H20 chip developed specifically to comply with export rules. The restrictions were briefly eased after US authorities negotiated a 15% levy for exported chips.
Despite these constraints, Huang has advocated for continued engagement in China. “What’s in the best interest of China is for foreign companies to invest in China, compete in China, and for them to also have vibrant competition themselves,” he said. “They would also like to come out of China and participate around the world.”
Acknowledging China’s efforts to foster a globally competitive AI ecosystem, Huang reiterated his hope that the world’s two largest economies could find common ground. He remains a proponent of constructive competition, rather than decoupling, even as Nvidia adapts to shifting regulatory landscapes.
Chinese Tech Titans Accelerate Domestic Semiconductor Innovation
In response to export controls, Chinese technology giants have sharply ramped up research and development of home-grown chips. Huawei, ByteDance, Alibaba, Tencent, and Baidu are at the forefront of this national push, investing billions of dollars in in-house semiconductor projects and forging partnerships with domestic suppliers.
- Huawei recently unveiled its AI chip roadmap, detailing strategies for AI model training and deployment that circumvent reliance on Nvidia hardware. The company is rapidly advancing its Ascend AI processor series despite facing US blacklists and sanctions.
- Alibaba and ByteDance have invested aggressively in developing their own AI accelerators for their vast cloud computing and digital content operations.
- Baidu and Tencent have launched chips such as Kunlun and Zixiao, optimized for AI workloads and data center performance.
Analysts at TrendForce estimate that domestic AI chipmakers now control over 10% of the Chinese server accelerator market in 2025, up from less than 2% before the most recent US curbs. While Nvidia still dominates China’s high-end AI chip market—with more than 80% market share, according to Counterpoint Research—the rapid progress by local rivals is narrowing the gap and improving China’s tech self-sufficiency.
Supply Chain Resilience and the Global Investment Landscape
These developments have reshaped global supply chains as companies diversify partnerships and accelerate investment to ensure uninterrupted access to AI infrastructure. US semiconductor equipment vendors like Applied Materials and Lam Research have likewise seen increased scrutiny, while memory producers such as South Korea’s SK Hynix and Samsung navigate tightening export regulations.
China’s government has pledged nearly $40 billion in fresh funds for its National Integrated Circuit Industry Investment Fund since 2024, fueling a boom in domestic chip startups. As a result, chip designers and foundries like SMIC, Yangtze Memory, and Cambricon are scaling up their capabilities even as they remain several years behind TSMC, Samsung, and industry leaders in manufacturing ultrafine 3nm and 5nm process nodes.
Nvidia Capitalizes on Global AI Demand
Amid these geopolitical headwinds, Nvidia’s fundamentals remain robust. The company’s graphics processing units (GPUs) are the backbone for training large language models like OpenAI’s GPT-4, Google’s Gemini, and Baidu’s ERNIE. Surging global demand propelled Nvidia’s revenue past $100 billion in the last fiscal year, with net income more than doubling year-over-year.
Nvidia recently announced plans for historic investments—including acquiring a 4% stake in Intel for $5 billion and committing up to $100 billion into next-generation AI data centers in partnership with OpenAI. “Nobody needs atomic bombs. Everybody needs AI,” Huang quipped, dismissing fears of AI hardware oversupply by arguing that industries worldwide are only beginning to tap AI-driven accelerated computing.
Industry analysts expect Nvidia’s growth trajectory to continue as enterprises, government agencies, and scientific institutions race to build AI infrastructure powered by its latest Blackwell B100 and B200 chips. Nevertheless, the company faces growing competition from AMD, Intel, custom silicon startups, and, crucially, China’s rising domestic champions.
Global Stakes in the US-China Tech Race
The US-China chip race is emblematic of broader global shifts in technology, trade, and security. As each side pushes for leadership in critical tech sectors, the strategies employed—whether through sanctions, industrial policy, or tech alliances—will shape not only commercial fortunes but the rules of the digital era itself.
Jensen Huang’s remarks underscore a historic crossroads: Will the world’s largest economies choose engagement and robust competition, or drift towards tech decoupling and parallel innovation silos? For now, the answer remains uncertain, but with Chinese companies just “nanoseconds behind”, the contest for AI leadership has never been more intense—or more consequential for the future of innovation globally.

