Home Investing News Nvidia stock sinks 4%: are Washington’s China AI chip delays spooking markets?

Nvidia stock sinks 4%: are Washington’s China AI chip delays spooking markets?

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Nvidia stock (NASDAQ: NVDA) slipped sharply on Wednesday as Washington’s China policy collided with investor nerves.

The NVDA share price fell around 4% after fresh headlines underscored that US national‑security reviews are still holding up H200 AI chip sales to China.

The prospect that a politically sensitive product line could be stuck in licensing limbo for months was enough to rattle traders who have bid the stock up on near‑flawless AI growth assumptions.

Nvidia stock: Regulatory limbo for H200 exports

The immediate catalyst was a report, citing Financial Times, that Nvidia’s planned H200 shipments to Chinese tech giants remain stalled.

The development comes nearly two months after President Donald Trump said he would allow exports under strict conditions and a 25% government fee.

The Commerce Department’s Bureau of Industry and Security has already revised its rules to move H200 and AMD’s MI325X onto a case‑by‑case licensing track.

But export applications are still being screened across multiple agencies, including State, Defense, and Energy, under a national‑security review.

Until those inter‑agency sign‑offs arrive, China remains a “theoretical” market.

Sources told Reuters that Chinese customers are holding off on placing large H200 orders because they do not know whether licenses will come through or what conditions.

Analysts say that uncertainty is now bleeding directly into revenue models.

China was once Nvidia’s second‑largest market, and Chinese tech firms have reportedly queued up more than two million H200 chips, at roughly 27,000 dollars apiece.

Investors price in regulatory risk

By afternoon in New York, Nvidia’s stock was down about 3.95%, underperforming both the S&P 500 and the tech‑heavy Nasdaq.

Trading desks flagged heavier‑than‑usual volume in Nvidia options as investors moved to hedge China‑related downside.

Some AI hardware peers also softened, with traders citing the same regulatory overhang and broader risk‑off flows out of high‑multiple growth names.

The move adds to a choppy stretch for the chipmaker after a series of China‑linked headlines, from US rule shifts to reports of Chinese customs officials temporarily blocking H200 imports.

Strategists say the reaction is less about immediate earnings and more about narrative.

Equity analysts point out that global demand for data‑center AI accelerators remains exceptionally strong, and that Nvidia has largely stopped counting China in its formal guidance because of policy volatility.

From that perspective, the H200 saga is primarily a timing issue.

The revenue that may be pushed out or partially diverted, rather than permanently destroyed.

As one recent analysis put it, longer‑term AI infrastructure demand “remains intact, the investors should watch the calendar, not the concept.”

For now, investors are stuck in a waiting game.

Key catalysts include any formal US licensing decisions for H200 exports, clearer signals from Beijing on whether it will actually allow large‑scale imports, and fresh commentary from CEO Jensen Huang on how much China exposure is embedded in Nvidia’s outlook.

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