Nvidia shares jump after resuming H20 sales in China, announcing new processor

Published 15/07/2025, 02:56
Updated 15/07/2025, 21:32
© Reuters

Investing.com-- NVIDIA Corporation (NASDAQ:NVDA) said on Monday evening that it will resume selling its H20 processor in China “soon,” amid improving trade relations between Washington and Beijing, and as CEO Jensen Huang met with officials from both sides.

Nvidia also announced a new graphical processing unit for China which it claimed was ideal for artificial intelligence smart factories and logistics.  

Shares of NVIDIA closed up 4% on Tuesday.

Huang told customers that Nvidia is “filing applications to sell the Nvidia H20 GPU again… the U.S. government has assured Nvidia that licenses will be granted,” the world’s most valuable listed company said in a statement.

The move comes after Washington lifted several restrictions on the export of chip technology to China, having recently allowed chip design majors including Synopsys (NASDAQ:SNPS) to resume sales in China.

Nvidia was effectively blocked from selling its H20 chip in China earlier this year, as a trade war between the world’s biggest economies worsened. The Donald Trump administration had imposed even stricter licensing requirements for sales to China.

Nvidia had forecast at least $5.5 billion in charges due to the increased restrictions, given that China still represents a major market for the chipmaker. 

But Washington and Beijing in May and June agreed to substantially lower their respective trade tariffs against each other.

The H20 is a processor Nvidia designed specifically to sell in China, and was made in line with earlier, Biden-era restrictions. The chip is wildly popular among Chinese artificial intelligence developers, and is used by majors such as DeepSeek, Tencent (HK:0700), Baidu (NASDAQ:BIDU), and Alibaba (NYSE:BABA). 

Nvidia had warned repeatedly that stricter U.S. restrictions threatened to block it completely from Chinese markets. CEO Huang even called U.S. export restrictions against China a “failure.” 

William Blair analyst Sebastien Naji estimates that the deal will add roughly $0.30 to NVIDIA’s EPS for fiscal 2026.  "... we see an opportunity for $0.30 in additional EPS in fiscal 2026 assuming China revenue of roughly $20 billion for the full year," Naji said. This would be up modestly from the $17.1 billion in China sales for fiscal 2025. The analyst also said the China development could provide a tailwinds to gross margins in the second half.

Several brokerage firms raised their price target on NVIDIA following the China news.

Oppenheimer analyst Rick Schafer raised the price target on NVIDIA to $200 from $175. Additionally, Melius Research analyst Benjamin Reitzes raised the target price on Nvidia to $235. At the same time, DZ Bank increased its target price on the stock to $195, BofA raised its price target to $220, and Mizuho (NYSE:MFG) raised its price target to $195.

(Frank DeMatteo contributed reporting)

 

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