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Nvidia Just Lost a $5.5 Billion Opportunity. This Fast-Growing Tech Stock Could Scoop It Up

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Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA) just became the latest company to get hit by the trade war.

On Wednesday, the stock tumbled after it announced that it would take a charge of up to $5.5 billion in the first quarter due to a new restriction on exports of its H20 chips to China. Those chips are less powerful versions of its popular artificial intelligence (AI) accelerators, and the policy is in keeping with increasingly tight restrictions on sending cutting-edge technology to China.

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The U.S. has pressured a number of other companies to restrict high-tech exports to China, including EUV lithography machine maker ASML. AMD also took a smaller $800 million write-down on the export policy impacting the H20 chip.

However, these decisions have second-order effects, and one of them is that it's likely to make China invest more in AI chip technology, much like those restrictions helped lead to the development of DeepSeek's low-cost AI chatbot.

One of the Chinese stocks that could take advantage of the restrictions on chip imports is Xiaomi (OTC: XIACF), one of China's most diversified tech companies. Xiaomi makes smartphones, computers, electric cars, and other consumer electronics. It also makes money from advertising, online gaming, fintech, and chip design, which is one of its most promising growth opportunities.

A chip with U.S. and Chinese symbols on it.
Image source: Getty Images.

The opportunity for Xiaomi

Xiaomi, which generated about $50 billion in revenue last year and has a market cap of $144 billion, has recently gotten into chip design, working on developing its own 3nm system-on-chips (SoCs) in-house for its phones and other devices. This would be China's first 3nm SoC, and it intends to begin production this year.

Xiaomi is also making investments in AI, including building a 10,000 GPU cluster to develop AI models.

The company has shown it has the ability to innovate quickly, as it released an electric car last year after just three years of development, and it has already sold 135,000 vehicles. AI chips would also be a good fit for its burgeoning auto business, especially if the company is working on an autonomous vehicle.

The chip restrictions on exports from China are likely to expand as the trade war heats up, opening up more opportunities for Xiaomi and its peers, meaning there is more than $5.5 billion up for grabs here as American semiconductor companies like Nvidia are forced to retreat from the market.

Is Xiaomi a buy?

After years of underperforming the market, Xiaomi has surged in recent months, jumping 157% over the last year, even after pulling back since the trade war erupted a month ago.