China Is ‘Rejecting’ Nvidia’s H200 Chips, Outfoxing US Strategy, Sacks Says

China has figured out the US strategy for allowing it to buy Nvidia Corp.’s H200 and is rejecting the AI chip in favor of domestically developed semiconductors, White House AI czar David Sacks said, citing news reports.

President Donald Trump said on Monday he would allow shipments of Nvidia’s H200 to China, part of an administration effort backed by Sacks to challenge Chinese tech champions like Huawei Technologies Co. by bringing American competition to their home market. On Friday, Sacks signaled that he was uncertain about whether that approach would work.

“They’re rejecting our chips,” Sacks said in an interview on Bloomberg Tech, citing an unspecified news article he had seen that day. “Apparently they don’t want them, and I think the reason for that is they want semiconductor independence.”

In a social media post Saturday, Sacks said he was referring to a Financial Times report that China was poised to limit access to the chips via a local approval process where Chinese buyers would need to justify their purchases.

Sacks’ comments raise questions about whether Nvidia will be able to recover revenue from China, a data center market it has removed entirely from its forecasts but that Chief Executive Officer Jensen Huang has put at $50 billion this year. Bloomberg Intelligence analysts estimate annual H200 revenue in China to be a $10 billion opportunity — but only if the nation accepts the US firm’s chips.

In a statement from a spokesperson, Nvidia said it continues to work with the administration on H200 licenses for vetted customers. “While we do not yet have results to report, it’s clear that three years of overbroad export controls fueled America’s foreign competitors and cost US taxpayers billions of dollars,” the company said.