The current White House administration is developing regulatory measures that would mandate Nvidia and Advanced Micro Devices obtain federal authorization prior to exporting AI processors to nearly every international market.
NVIDIA Corporation, NVDA
According to reports from Bloomberg and Reuters, the planned framework establishes a three-level licensing structure determined by shipment volume. Orders below 1,000 units would undergo standard evaluation. Medium-volume transactions would require advance clearance. Massive deployments involving 200,000 processors or greater would necessitate security assurances and commitments from purchasing nations to invest in American AI infrastructure.
Countries currently facing complete bans on advanced U.S. semiconductor technology—including China, Russia, North Korea, and Iran—would remain excluded from these new provisions.
Representatives from both Nvidia and AMD declined to provide statements at press time. Trading activity Friday morning showed Nvidia declining approximately 1.1%, while AMD dropped roughly 1.2%.
Both semiconductor manufacturers have experienced downward pressure throughout the current year. Market sentiment toward AI-sector equities has softened amid apprehensions regarding technology company capital expenditures, escalating memory component prices, and a general market rotation toward value-oriented investments.
Nvidia’s experience with Chinese markets provides concrete evidence of potential ramifications. In April 2025, the Trump administration halted processor shipments to China pending comprehensive evaluation. Beijing retaliated by prohibiting foreign semiconductors in government-supported data facilities.
Almost twelve months later, commercial activity remains suspended. Throughout 2024, Nvidia generated $17 billion from Chinese chip transactions, representing approximately 13% of consolidated revenue.
Nvidia disclosed $216 billion in aggregate revenue for the previous year, representing 65% growth year-over-year. AMD announced $35 billion, reflecting 34% expansion. International demand constitutes a critical driver for both companies’ growth trajectories.
The Commerce Department referenced recent AI processor agreements in Middle Eastern markets as templates for the emerging regulatory approach. The previous year saw approval for up to 70,000 advanced chips destined for entities in the United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia.
However, finalizing those arrangements required months of deliberation involving U.S. investment pledges and security considerations. That volume represents a fraction of the millions of processors Nvidia and AMD routinely supply to major American technology corporations.
Should comparable authorization procedures extend to all international transactions, market access to the projected $1.5 trillion “sovereign AI” sector could face significant delays—where nations seek to establish independent national AI capabilities.
The Commerce Department clarified it is not reinstating the earlier “AI diffusion” framework advanced during President Biden’s tenure, which would have imposed direct limitations on worldwide chip distribution.
The proposed regulatory structure has not reached final form and may undergo substantial revision or complete abandonment prior to any enforcement.
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