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Rare-earth exports at center of U.S.-China trade truce risk, WSJ reports

Rare-earth exports at center of U.S.-China trade truce risk, WSJ reports

A trade truce between the U.S. and China is at risk of falling apart as China's slow-walking on rare-earth exports fuels U.S. recriminations that China is reneging on the deal, according to The Wall Street Journal's Lingling Wei, Gavin Bade and Brian Schwartz. Chinese Vice Premier He Lifeng agreed to the demand U.S. demand that Beijing resume rare-earth exports in return for the U.S. agreeing to a 90-day tariff truce during talks in Geneva earlier this month, but since then Beijing has continued to slow-walk approvals for export licenses for rare earths and other elements needed to make cars, chips and other products, people familiar with the matter told The Journal.
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Jensen Huang's deft handling of U.S.-China tensions cements status as more than a CEO
Jensen Huang's deft handling of U.S.-China tensions cements status as more than a CEO

CNBC

time15 minutes ago

  • CNBC

Jensen Huang's deft handling of U.S.-China tensions cements status as more than a CEO

Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang has already ascended to rockstar status within the tech community. Now, after securing Washington's approval to restart AI chip sales in China, Nvidia investors are wondering: Is there anything he can't do? "Jensen is a salesman, as well as a statesman, as well as an architect, as well as an engineer, as well as a genius," Jim Cramer said Wednesday morning on CNBC. "He knows he has to tell the story." Huang has been telling the same story since April, when the Trump administration tightened Biden-era rules: Locking Nvidia out of the Chinese AI market — home to half of the world's artificial intelligence researchers — on national security grounds will actually undermine U.S. tech leadership across the globe. "Because there are so many developers there and because the world is going to adopt technology from one country or another — and we prefer it to be the American technology stack," Huang told Jim in May . Of course, the Trump administration's April decision also cost Nvidia billions of dollars in lost Chinese sales, a fact the company readily acknowledged. But for the most part, Huang kept his criticism of the policy focused on what he argued are the negative implications for the entire U.S. tech industry, one of the country's economic crown jewels, amid rising competition in China. He made the case often and all over — on earnings calls , in interviews on TV, and in the halls of the U.S. Capitol Building and at industry conferences . The White House reversal, made public late Monday in an Nvidia press release, suggests that Huang's argument broke through. In that statement, the world's most valuable company by market capitalization said it expects to "soon" receive U.S. government licenses to sell its H20 chips to Chinese customers. The H20 is a throttled-back version of Nvidia's top-end AI chips — designed specifically for the Chinese market to comply with Washington's previous export rules. Speaking from Beijing on Wednesday, in at least his third public visit to China so far this year, Huang sought to downplay his impact on Washington's about-face on the H20. He said the decision was "completely in control" of the U.S. and Chinese governments, which for months have been engaged in trade talks following Trump's tariff escalation. "The discussion has nothing to do with me," Huang said. Jim and other bulls on Wall Street aren't buying it. Instead, they're heaping praise on the way the Nvidia boss has cultivated a relationship with President Donald Trump — including traveling alongside him to the Middle East in May, when Nvidia was on the receiving end of a separate favorable Trump policy shift — at the same time, he's avoided the ire of Beijing and maintained the adoration of Chinese techies. Before his latest visit to China, Huang met with Trump last week. In April, Nvidia also committed to produce up to $500 billion in AI infrastructure in the U.S. over the next four years. "You're seeing what you get with one of the world's best CEOs of all time, maybe the best," Melius Research tech analyst Ben Reitzes said Wednesday on CNBC. "The intangibles you get. How he threaded this needle. How he went and did the right thing for the company, the world and the shareholders — all in one. It's really wild. He turned Trump around, and then he's obviously dealing with the Chinese. He's hustling. I've never seen a guy work so hard, just at this consistent pace." After Nvidia shares jumped 4% Tuesday on the H20 news, the stock was little changed in Wednesday's session, a subdued day for the broader market overall, too. Still, Nvidia has gained more than 75% since its April 21 close, which came a little more than a week after the Trump administration's H20 ban was announced, and the president was still escalating trade tensions with China. At that time, it seemed as if Nvidia had become a geopolitical pawn in the U.S.-China trade talks — a development that frustrated Jim as a longtime Nvidia investor. The thing about pawns, in the game of chess at least, is they're capable of being converted into a queen, the most powerful piece on the board. "This has been an amazing diplomatic effort by Nvidia, and it's paying off," Reitzes said. "Let's hope it continues to pay off. I'm pretty optimistic that they're getting not only 10% of sales back, but even more. It could be up to 20%. They do need to continue to get approval for [selling chips in China] as we go throughout the Trump presidency, but I'll never put something past Jensen to be able to do so." In a CNBC interview Tuesday , Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick, a key figure in the White House's tariff negotiations, indicated the Trump administration loosened its export controls on AI chips as part of the agreement with China to increase its exports of rare earth minerals. Lutnick said the Trump administration felt comfortable allowing China access to the H20 because it is not Nvidia's top-of-the-line offering. That title currently belongs to the Blackwell generation of chips. "We don't sell them our best stuff, not our second-best stuff, not even our third-best. I think fourth best is where we have come out that we're cool," Lutnick said. NVDA YTD mountain Nvidia's year-to-date stock performance. Not everyone is pleased with Nvidia regaining access to the Chinese market. Democratic Sen. Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts called the Trump administration's decision "shameful," and made note of Huang's engagements with the president. "Advanced chips are critical to our national security, and the Trump Administration rightfully banned Nvidia from shipping the H20 chip to the [People's Republic of China] just three months ago," Warren said in a statement. "Yet, true to form, the Trump Administration is now reversing itself and appeasing Nvidia's CEO, who attended the $1-million-dollar-a-head dinner at Mar-a-Lago in April and is looking to cash in on the China market." Warren is known for being hawkish on China, and this isn't her first time criticizing Nvidia, either. When media reports surfaced in May that Nvidia was planning to open a research-and-development facility in Shanghai, Warren pressed the company for more details in a joint letter with Republican Sen. Jim Banks of Indiana. In February, Warren also joined forces with GOP Sen. Josh Hawley of Missouri to call for tougher export controls on Nvidia's AI chips in the wake of Chinese AI startup DeepSeek's efficiency breakthroughs. DeepSeek's emergence in late January sent Nvidia shares tanking primarily on fears that fewer of its most powerful chips would be needed in the future. However, it also forced investors to contend with those renewed calls for Nvidia to lose access to the lucrative Chinese market — a long-standing risk ever since the Biden White House's first round of export controls in 2022. For his part, Jim has also been a critic of China over the years on a range of economic matters. But when it comes to the role of AI technology in the broader geopolitical landscape, Jim said Huang has helped him evolve his view. "He got me thinking that perhaps we should be thinking more about them needing us, and when they need us — which happens very rarely — we should be there," Jim said Wednesday. "We can dominate, and they can write everything on us, or they can write everything on their own stuff." "Better that we be the reserve currency of tech in the world," Jim added, referencing the way that the U.S. dollar's status as the reserve currency of the world has provided some benefits to the U.S. economy . If they weren't already convinced, Nvidia investors now have more evidence of the benefits provided by Huang's stewardship, which made Nvidia the first company ever to have a $4 trillion stock market value. It closed above that threshold last week. Not even a week later, the stock was knocking on the door of $4.2 trillion. (Jim Cramer's Charitable Trust is long NVDA. See here for a full list of the stocks.) As a subscriber to the CNBC Investing Club with Jim Cramer, you will receive a trade alert before Jim makes a trade. Jim waits 45 minutes after sending a trade alert before buying or selling a stock in his charitable trust's portfolio. If Jim has talked about a stock on CNBC TV, he waits 72 hours after issuing the trade alert before executing the trade. THE ABOVE INVESTING CLUB INFORMATION IS SUBJECT TO OUR TERMS AND CONDITIONS AND PRIVACY POLICY , TOGETHER WITH OUR DISCLAIMER . NO FIDUCIARY OBLIGATION OR DUTY EXISTS, OR IS CREATED, BY VIRTUE OF YOUR RECEIPT OF ANY INFORMATION PROVIDED IN CONNECTION WITH THE INVESTING CLUB. NO SPECIFIC OUTCOME OR PROFIT IS GUARANTEED.

Why Cheap Chinese EVs Aren't Invading the U.S. Market in 2025
Why Cheap Chinese EVs Aren't Invading the U.S. Market in 2025

Miami Herald

time32 minutes ago

  • Miami Herald

Why Cheap Chinese EVs Aren't Invading the U.S. Market in 2025

Scroll through TikTok or auto forums, and you'll hear a common refrain: a flood of Chinese EVs is coming to undercut U.S. automakers. The numbers sound scary - hundreds of thousands of cars exported by China as "used" despite never being driven. But for some reality, almost none of them are reaching the U.S., and they're not going to anytime soon. China exported over 400,000 "zero-mileage" used vehicles in 2024, mostly EVs. But those went to Latin America, Southeast Asia, and Eastern Europe. U.S. Customs data and direct reporting confirm that fewer than 50 Chinese passenger EVs have cleared legal hurdles to drive on American roads, and those were niche low-speed vehicles like the Wuling Macaron. "Zero-mileage used" is simply not a loophole you can scale. It's a stunt - and not a very effective one. Take the BYD Seagull. It's one of the most talked-about electric hatchbacks coming out of China. It uses a 38 or 44 kWh battery pack, delivers around 190–250 miles of range, and does 0–60 in about 7.9 seconds (source: BYD Global specs). The car weighs under 2,600 pounds, which is lean by EV standards. The catch? It's built to Chinese domestic specs. Steering calibration is ultra-light, chassis tuning is floaty, and NVH isolation isn't up to par with a Bolt EUV or Hyundai Kona Electric. The Seagull isn't tuned for interstate travel at 75 mph. It was designed for congested cities at 30–50 mph - and that shows in ride feedback and powertrain tuning. Let's say you find a used Chinese EV brought over the border from Mexico with 310 miles on the odometer. Legally, that qualifies as "used" under tariff law. But here's what stops it from being registered in the U.S.: It lacks FMVSS safety certification (no crash test compliance, no U.S. airbag standards).It lacks EPA certification, even for EVs, which still need emissions and onboard diagnostics likely contains banned connected components (GPS, camera modules, telematics systems) blocked under the 2025 federal rule targeting China-origin software and hardware. That's three federal violations before you even try to get plates on it. If you do manage to get one across the border, and are seen on US roads, expect instant vehicle seizure, registration fraud charges, and fines. The panic around a wave of sub-$25K Chinese EVs undercutting the U.S. market is misplaced. The loophole exists on paper. It doesn't work in practice. You can't flood a market when the door is bolted shut. So far, Chinese EVs remain boxed out by tariffs, tech bans, and a mountain of red tape. They're gaining ground globally - just not here. The idea of walking into a used lot in Texas or Florida and grabbing a zero-mile BYD Dolphin for $18K? Fiction. For now, anyway. If you want a cheap EV in America, your options are still coming from Detroit, Seoul, or Tokyo - not Shenzhen. If you want a Chinese EV drive now, head down to Cancun for the weekend. Copyright 2025 The Arena Group, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

Nvidia Stock Jumps as Chipmaker Plans to Resume Sales of Key AI Chip to China
Nvidia Stock Jumps as Chipmaker Plans to Resume Sales of Key AI Chip to China

Yahoo

time37 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Nvidia Stock Jumps as Chipmaker Plans to Resume Sales of Key AI Chip to China

KEY TAKEAWAYS Nvidia said it plans to resume sales of its best-selling H20 AI chip to China, days after CEO Jensen Huang met with President Donald Trump. 'The U.S. government has assured NVIDIA that licenses will be granted, and NVIDIA hopes to start deliveries soon,' the chipmaker said. Nvidia shares jumped in Tuesday said it plans to resume sales of its best-selling H20 AI chip to China, days after CEO Jensen Huang met with President Donald Trump. Shares of Nvidia jumped more than 4% Tuesday following the news. Shares of Advanced Micro Devices (AMD), other chip companies, and Nvidia partners including Super Micro Computer (SMCI) also rose. (Read Investopedia's full coverage of today's trading here.) "NVIDIA is filing applications to sell the NVIDIA H20 GPU again,' the company said in a blog post late Monday. 'The U.S. government has assured NVIDIA that licenses will be granted, and NVIDIA hopes to start deliveries soon,' the chipmaker said. The green light from Washington marks a big win for Nvidia, as analysts had said the restrictions would send sales in China, a key market, down to "zero." The AI chipmaker said in May that it took a $4.5 billion charge in the fiscal first quarter associated with export curbs imposed by the Trump administration on sales of its H20 products to China. The H20 chips are less powerful than Nvidia's newer ones and had been tailored to meet prior export limits for the Chinese market. Separately, Nvidia announced a new RTX PRO AI chip that it said was 'fully compliant' for the Chinese market. The White House didn't immediately respond to an Investopedia request for comment. Nvidia shares entered Tuesday up by more than a fifth this year. This article has been updated since it was first published to reflect more recent share price values. Read the original article on Investopedia

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