China, NVIDIA
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Jensen Huang, the chipmaker’s chief executive, is trying to balance his company’s interests as the United States and China compete for supremacy in artificial intelligence.
Nvidia announced that sales of its H20 chip to China would resume, with Washington's nod. Read more at straitstimes.com. Read more at straitstimes.com.
Wearing his iconic leather jacket, Huang walked into the sunny courtyard of the Mandarin Oriental hotel earlier than scheduled and took multiple questions.
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang described artificial intelligence models from Chinese firms Deepseek, Alibaba and Tencent as "world class" and said AI was "revolutionising" supply chains, at an exhibition in Beijing on Wednesday.
Huang has unloaded 1.2 million shares, totaling about $190 million, since he started selling stock this year, according to InsiderScore.
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Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang says the US must win over global AI developers — especially the 50% in China — to lead the future of AI.
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang praised Chinese AI models as "world class" at a Beijing expo, highlighting their open-source approach and global impact. This
CNBC’s Deirdre Bosa joins 'Money Movers' to discuss Nvidia's win over China users and CEO Jensen Huang's Trump playbook.
"You know this is no different than getting three opinions. Three doctors' opinions. I do the same thing," Huang said.
Now, let's consider Jensen Huang's recent move. The CEO sold shares of Nvidia from July 8 through July 10, and that follows a sale of shares from June 18 through June 23.
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Huang’s comments stand in stark contrast to those of Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei, who said AI could eliminate half of all entry-level white collar jobs and spike unemployment by double digits over the next five years. Amazon CEO Andy Jassy has also warned AI will reduce the company’s total corporate workforce.