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    TECHNOLOGY

    AI boom boosts Nvidia despite ‘geopolitical issues’

    KahawaTungu ReporterBy KahawaTungu ReporterAugust 28, 2025No Comments3 Mins Read
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    Computer-chip designer Nvidia has been boosted by big tech firms keen to expand their AI capabilities, despite dealing with US and China tensions.

    On Wednesday it reported $46.7bn revenue (£34.6bn) for the second three months of the year, a 56% surge from the same period in 2024.

    But Nvidia, which has been caught in the crossfire of a trade war between the US and China, said it “continued to work through geopolitical issues” and its shares fell in after-hours trading.

    The company has had to navigate the Trump administration’s fast-changing policies aimed at ensuring the US remains ahead in AI development.

    An ongoing AI boom

    Nvidia’s sophisticated chips have been an important part of the AI boom.

    On Wednesday it said demand for its products remains strong, especially from big tech firms including Instagram-owner Meta, and ChatGPT-maker OpenAI, as they race to build-out AI.

    “The AI race is now on,” said Nvidia boss Jensen Huang in a call with analysts following the report’s release, saying spending from four big tech firms had doubled to $600bn per year.

    “Over time, you would think that artificial intelligence would… accelerate GDP growth,” Huang said. “Our contribution to that is a large part of the AI infrastructure.”

    The company’s revenue from data centres surged by 56% to $41.1bn, even as it fell slightly short of analysts’ expectations.

    In July, Nvidia became the world’s first $4trn company.

    The Santa Clara, California-based designer of artificial intelligence (AI) chips said revenue in the current quarter would probably grow to $54bn, topping the expectations of Wall Street analysts.

    ‘Geopolitical issues’

    But Nvidia remains exposed to geopolitical tensions between the US and China.

    The company announced in July that it would resume sales of its high-end artificial intelligence chips to China.

    The move came after Huang successfully lobbied the Trump administration to reverse its ban on the sale of the company’s H20 chips, developed specifically for the Chinese market.

    The administration had imposed the ban amid worries that the chips might benefit the Chinese military, in addition to AI developers based in the country.

    On Wednesday, executives said that in late July, the US government had started reviewing licenses for sales of H20 chips designed specifically for Chinese customers.

    But the company added that it had not shipped any H20s, despite some China-based customers receiving those licenses in recent weeks.

    The US government is expecting to get 15% of the revenue generated from licensed H20 sales.

    Nvidia did not include H20 in its outlook for the current quarter and said it was also lobbying the US government to approve the sale of its Blackwell ships to China, the largest market for chips.

    In the meantime, analysts say, China is cultivating competition in the sector that Nvidia currently dominates.

    “US export restrictions are fuelling domestic chipmaking in China,” said Emarketer analyst Jacob Bourne after the report’s release.

    He said the question now is whether Nvidia’s “dive into robotics” will help it sustain its role as “the bellwether of the AI economy”.

    By BBC News

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    Artificial Intelligence Nvidia
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