Trump confirms Nvidia chip agreement
Nvidia will pay the United States 15% of the money it makes from selling artificial intelligence chips to China, President Donald Trump said in a press conference on Monday.
Trump said he allowed Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang to sell H20 chips to China while the company provides the U.S. government with a kickback of the profits.
“The H20 is obsolete,” Trump said. “So we negotiate a little deal so he’s, essentially, selling an old chip,” Trump added, referring to Huang.
Trump said he initially asked for a 20% cut from sales of Nvidia’s chips but the two landed on 15%.
In April, Trump banned Nvidia from selling H20 chips to China. The administration later reversed the ban in July.
A coalition of democratic lawmakers, including Sen. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., criticized the administration’s July reversal.
“Limiting the PRC’s access to advanced compute has been a focus of Congress: one with a strong bipartisan commitment across both chambers and both parties,” The letter read.
“The PRC’s development of advanced AI capabilities represents a clear risk to the United States’ national and economic security, and the administration’s willingness to trade away that security is extremely troubling,” the letter continued.
Latest News Stories
Wilmington Tops Peotone in Defensive Battle, 40-29
Meeting Summary and Briefs: Will County Planning and Zoning Commission for December 16, 2025
Joliet Property Owner Cleared to Convert Non-Conforming Building into Two-Unit Residence
Colorado adopts first-of-its-kind water protections in U.S.
Epstein files redactions frustrate lawmakers
Supreme Court weighs gun owners’ challenge to IL transit carry ban
Nine pharmaceutical companies agree to most-favored-nation pricing
Congress leaves for holidays after zero progress on federal funding
EXCLUSIVE: New House committee report highlights increasing terrorism threat in U.S.
Chicago aldermen pass revenue package, business groups express concern
DOJ posts thousands of Epstein documents to partially comply with law
DOJ lawsuit against Illinois draws support from election integrity advocates