Chinese companies reportedly considering sourcing H200 chips from the black market as chips held at the border — demand for Nvidia AI GPUs remain high despite political uncertainty

Nvidia server GPUs
(Image credit: Nvidia)

Chinese companies are reportedly considering purchasing Nvidia’s H200 AI GPUs from the black market after Beijing banned their import several days ago. According to a report by the South China Morning Post (SCMP), Chinese tech companies are faced with either paying more for the GPUs that have been imported illegally into the country or settling for less powerful, domestically made chips.

According to the report, three people familiar with the matter say Chinese customs officials are holding H200 chips at the border. The report says H200 orders are purportedly "super sensitive," and that it is "unclear when authorities would approve the imports." As such, buyers are reportedly considering getting the GPUs from the black market instead because of "urgent need." According to SCMP, resellers are receiving inquiries for the H200, with bundled servers (featuring eight H200 chips) valued at 50 per cent more than their official China list price.

Beijing is facing a dilemma, as it wants to pivot its dependence on Western-made chips and achieve “silicon sovereignty” by supporting its homegrown semiconductor industry. However, it’s also locked in a race with the United States for AI supremacy, and its tech companies need the latest chips they can get their hands on for training the most advanced models.

Because of this, some companies are reportedly turning to the black market to acquire the most powerful GPUs outside of regular, legal channels. Despite the U.S. Ban on advanced Nvidia chips, China hasn’t disallowed the sales of these advanced AI GPUs until recently. Because of this, there have been reports that Chinese companies have smuggled at least a billion dollars’ worth of Nvidia AI chips in 2025, with some importers flaunting the availability of Blackwell B300 well before its launch.

At the moment, it’s still uncertain whether Beijing’s ban on the H200 is a permanent directive or just a temporary measure to get more out of negotiations with the U.S., especially as President Trump is set to visit Beijing in April. Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang is also set to visit China in late January, although it’s not yet known if he will get to meet senior Chinese officials to talk about the H200 situation.

Google Preferred Source

Follow 3DTested on Google News, or add us as a preferred source, to get our latest news, analysis, & reviews in your feeds.

TOPICS
Jowi Morales
Contributing Writer
  • Zaranthos
    See, nobody likes the government telling them what they can and cannot do. Not in China, not in the USA, not anywhere.

    At the same time this is ironically funny. China saying we don't want or need no stinking Nvidia chips, we'll make our own. Meanwhile the people responsible for running the tech, and probably with the CCP breathing down their necks to win the AI race are like, umm we need more real compute...
    Reply
  • scottslayer
    I assume this is satire?
    The Chinese have been buying them black market in some capacity at every point.
    Reply
  • starmesh46277
    Unfortunately all information presented is incorrect. China is not in a race with the US. China is ahead of the US. The US is a 3rd world country wearing a Gucci belt
    Reply
  • SpicyLlama
    starmesh46277 said:
    Unfortunately all information presented is incorrect. China is not in a race with the US. China is ahead of the US. The US is a 3rd world country wearing a Gucci belt
    China is a third world country wearing a fake Gucci belt that fell off the back of a truck. Glad we agree both nations ignore their poorer majority to satisfy the wealthy elites.
    Reply
  • phead128
    H200s are banned because China's domestic AI solutions are just as competitive and China was to nuture their domestic options.

    CloudMatrix 384 AI cluster using Ascend 910C outperforms even "Blackwell" Ultra GB300 NVL72 clusters on a system-level performance basis, And the upcoming Ascend 950 cluster exceeds NVL 576 Rubin Ultra, Nvidia has planned for 2027. This is thanks to high-speed optical interconnects which allows you to string less capable chips together in cluster-basis, albeit at higher energy consumption cost. That's why China has banned H200s, because it's domestic options needs to be nutured.

    Https://wccftech.com/huaweis-ascend-910c-ai-chip-cluster-expects-to-outperform-nvidias-gb200-nvl72-systems/
    Reply