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Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA) shares fell more than 7% on Wednesday morning, after the company disclosed new export restrictions on its artificial intelligence (AI) chips. Specifically, the company must now obtain licenses from the U.S. government to sell its H20 processors in China.
However, Nvidia doesn't expect those licenses to be forthcoming. The company plans to take a $5.5 billion charge related to "H20 products for inventory, purchase commitments, and related services" in the first quarter of fiscal 2026 (which ends April 27), according to a regulatory filing.
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Nvidia stock now has plummeted 30% from the record high it reached in January. Should investors buy the dip?
Nvidia faces new export restrictions that will further harm its China business
Nvidia has been navigating export restrictions in China for several years. In 2022, the Biden administration prohibited the company from selling its most powerful artificial intelligence (AI) accelerators, A100 and H100 graphics processing units ( GPUs), to Chinese businesses due to concerns about their military applications. Nvidia responded by tweaking its A100 and H100 architectures to build less powerful chips that complied with export requirements.
Those processors, called A800 and H800, were adopted by several Chinese technology companies, including Alibaba, Baidu, and Tencent. However, in 2023, the Biden administration restricted the sale of those processors in China.
Next, Nvidia developed an even less powerful Hopper GPU called the H20 that complied with latest export curbs, but the Trump administration has now effectively prohibited the sale of those processors in China, too. In total, Bloomberg Intelligence estimates that the latest restrictions will cost the company between $14 billion and $18 billion in revenue in fiscal 2026.
While Nvidia has reported exceptional financial results since the generative AI boom began in late 2022, export restrictions have still taken a severe toll. China accounted for over 26% of total revenue in fiscal 2022 but just 13% of total revenue in fiscal 2025. Put differently, total sales increased at 69% annually during that period, but revenue from China increased at just 34% annually.
Many Wall Street analysts remain bullish on Nvidia despite the latest export restrictions
Nvidia announced the H20 export controls on April 15 in a regulatory filing that told investors the licensing requirements will remain effective "for the indefinite future." Several analysts subsequently revised their target prices lower on April 16, as detailed below: