Huang’s presence has fuelled speculation that Nvidia could secure breakthroughs on long-delayed approvals for its H200 artificial intelligence chips, which have faced export restrictions and regulatory hurdles in China. An Nvidia spokesperson said the CEO is attending the Trump–Xi summit at the president’s invitation “to support America and the administration’s goals.”
The Nvidia boss is travelling alongside other heavyweight CEOs, including Tesla’s Elon Musk and Apple’s Tim Cook, as Washington and Beijing prepare for talks that will touch on trade, AI, semiconductors and the aftermath of the Iran war. Analysts say the participation of such tech and industrial leaders underlines how central advanced chips and supply chains have become to US–China relations.
Trump has framed the mission as an effort to “open up” China further to US goods and investment, while Chinese officials hope the visit will ease export controls and clarify rules on high-end chip sales. Beijing has tightly scrutinised Nvidia’s products amid US restrictions on cutting-edge AI hardware bound for Chinese firms.
The trip comes after confusion over Huang’s plans, with earlier reports and sources saying he had not been invited and would not attend. Following media coverage of his absence, Trump personally reached out, leading to Huang being seen boarding Air Force One in Alaska to join the journey to Beijing.
Market watchers say any sign of progress on Nvidia’s ability to sell more powerful chips into China could have major implications for the company’s earnings and for Chinese AI ambitions. However, they caution that export control policy ultimately lies with the US government, and any deal would need to fit within Washington’s broader national security framework.
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang has joined US President Donald Trump’s high-stakes trip to China, becoming part of a delegation of top American business leaders seeking to “open up” the Chinese market. Trump picked up Huang in Alaska en route to Beijing after earlier reports suggested the chip executive had been left out of the official delegation.
Huang’s presence has fuelled speculation that Nvidia could secure breakthroughs on long-delayed approvals for its H200 artificial intelligence chips, which have faced export restrictions and regulatory hurdles in China. An Nvidia spokesperson said the CEO is attending the Trump–Xi summit at the president’s invitation “to support America and the administration’s goals.”
The Nvidia boss is travelling alongside other heavyweight CEOs, including Tesla’s Elon Musk and Apple’s Tim Cook, as Washington and Beijing prepare for talks that will touch on trade, AI, semiconductors and the aftermath of the Iran war. Analysts say the participation of such tech and industrial leaders underlines how central advanced chips and supply chains have become to US–China relations.
Trump has framed the mission as an effort to “open up” China further to US goods and investment, while Chinese officials hope the visit will ease export controls and clarify rules on high-end chip sales. Beijing has tightly scrutinised Nvidia’s products amid US restrictions on cutting-edge AI hardware bound for Chinese firms.
The trip comes after confusion over Huang’s plans, with earlier reports and sources saying he had not been invited and would not attend. Following media coverage of his absence, Trump personally reached out, leading to Huang being seen boarding Air Force One in Alaska to join the journey to Beijing.
Market watchers say any sign of progress on Nvidia’s ability to sell more powerful chips into China could have major implications for the company’s earnings and for Chinese AI ambitions. However, they caution that export control policy ultimately lies with the US government, and any deal would need to fit within Washington’s broader national security framework.