Nvidia H100 chips inside a server room in a data center in India. (Dhiraj Singh/Bloomberg)
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Nvidia Corp. and Advanced Micro Devices Inc. agreed to pay 15% of their revenues from chip sales to China to the U.S. government as part of a deal with the Trump administration to secure export licenses, the Financial Times reported Aug. 10.Ìý
The paper cited a U.S. official as saying that Nvidia would share 15% of the revenue from sales of its H20 chip in China and AMD will deliver the same share from MI308 revenues.Ìý
The report followed an earlier story from the paper that the Commerce Department started issuing H20 licenses on Aug. 8, two days after Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang met President Trump.
The Trump administration had frozen the sale of some advanced chips to China earlier this year as trade tensions spiked between the world’s two largest economies.
Nvidia told the Financial Times that it follows U.S. export rules, while AMD didn’t respond to the paper’s request for comment.Ìý
Separately, Intel CEO Lip-Bu Tan is expected to visit the White House on Aug. 11 after Trump called for his dismissal last week over his ties to Chinese businesses, the Wall Street Journal reported Aug. 10.
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