Nvidia shares are treading water while the broader AI trade heats up. The stock gained 0.5% in after-hours trading Tuesday but remains down roughly 1% over three months.
NVIDIA Corporation, NVDA
Investors aren’t losing faith in AI. They’re just waiting for concrete news. Specifically, they want confirmation that Nvidia can actually ship its H200 chips to China or land major new orders from U.S. companies.
The memory chip sector is booming right now. Companies like Sandisk jumped over 27%. But Nvidia shareholders have already priced in the success of the latest Vera Rubin hardware for domestic markets.
The real question mark hangs over China. Will Beijing allow its tech companies to buy Nvidia’s chips in bulk?
CEO Jensen Huang addressed the issue Tuesday at CES in Las Vegas. He told reporters the company has restarted H200 production. “We’ve fired up our supply chain, and H200s are flowing through the line,” Huang said.
The final licensing details with the U.S. government are still being worked out. But Huang sounds confident they’ll get sorted soon.
The numbers behind the China market are huge. Nvidia already has orders for more than 2 million H200 chips at $27,000 per unit. That’s roughly $54 billion in potential revenue.
Reuters previously reported these orders exist. The catch is whether Chinese buyers will actually be allowed to complete those purchases.
In December, President Donald Trump said Nvidia could export the H200 to China. There’s one condition though. The company must pay 25% of those sales to the U.S. government.
The H200 isn’t Nvidia’s newest model. It’s a generation or two behind the cutting edge. But unlike previous China-approved chips, this one hasn’t been deliberately slowed down to meet export restrictions.
Huang doesn’t expect Beijing to make a formal announcement about approving imports. Instead, he says Nvidia will learn the regulatory status as purchase orders start coming in.
Huang previously estimated the Chinese market could be worth $50 billion annually. None of that revenue is currently baked into Nvidia’s forecasts.
Musk’s xAI just wrapped up a $20 billion Series E funding round. That exceeded the original $15 billion target. The company operates a data center near Memphis with over 200,000 Nvidia chips powering the Grok AI chatbot.
The facility plans to eventually house at least one million graphics processing units. That’s another massive order book for Nvidia if the expansion moves forward as planned.
The post Nvidia (NVDA) Stock: H200 China Orders Could Unlock $54 Billion Revenue Stream appeared first on CoinCentral.


