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Just caught wind of something that could shake up the whole AI chip landscape. Looks like the Trump administration is eyeing new export controls that would basically require government approval for any AI chip shipments leaving the U.S. We're talking Nvidia, AMD, everyone in the space.
The way they're structuring it is pretty interesting actually. They want a tiered system - anything under 1,000 GPUs gets a quick review, mid-range deployments need pre-clearance, but once you hit 200,000 GPUs or more, you're looking at strict certifications from government officials in whatever country you're shipping to. And those certifications would come with security requirements and commitments to invest in U.S. AI infrastructure.
Here's why this matters: we've already seen how costly these restrictions can be. Back in April 2025, the Trump admin restricted AI chip sales to China while they did a review. China fired back by banning foreign chips in government data centers and mandating Chinese processors instead. It's been almost a year now and chip sales to China still haven't resumed. For context, Nvidia was pulling in $17 billion from China in 2024 - that's 13% of their total revenue. That's real money.
Looking at the numbers, Nvidia hit $216 billion in revenue last year with 65% year-over-year growth, almost entirely tied to AI. AMD pulled in $35 billion with 34% growth. If these export controls actually get implemented, you're looking at a potential major headwind for both companies' growth trajectories.
Now, these rules haven't been finalized yet, so they could change or get scrapped entirely. But if they do go through, this could significantly slow down the AI chip advancement we've been seeing. Worth keeping tabs on how this develops because the ripple effects could be pretty substantial across the whole sector.