Nvidia and AMD pay 15% toll for China access in unprecedented US deal

Jacob Falkencrone
Global Head of Investment Strategy
Key points:
- Nvidia and AMD regained China market access by agreeing to give the US 15% of related sales, an unprecedented licence condition.
- The deal lifts near-term revenue but cuts margins and leaves exposure to shifting US–China relations.
- For investors, policy risk is now a profit driver in strategic sectors like AI chips.
In an August week in Washington, Nvidia and AMD secured a lifeline back into China’s AI chip market — but not without paying the price. In an unprecedented move, both companies agreed to hand the US government 15% of their revenue from certain chip sales to China, in return for the export licences they need to sell there.
For Wall Street, this is more than an unusual trade pact — it’s a blueprint for how geopolitics, corporate earnings, and market leadership are now inseparably linked. For investors, it’s a rare chance to see in real time how policy risk can morph into both opportunity and vulnerability.
The deal – part diplomacy, part transaction
The agreement allows Nvidia to sell its H20 AI chip and AMD its MI308 to China – products specifically designed to skirt prior US export restrictions. In exchange, both companies will pay Washington a 15% cut of all related sales. No US company has previously agreed to surrender a slice of revenue as a condition for an export licence.
For Nvidia, the stakes are enormous. The company earned roughly USD 17 billion from China in the last fiscal year — 13% of its global revenue — and AMD took in about USD 6.2 billion, or 24% of its sales. The April export halt put billions at risk, and this deal reopens the door. For the White House, it’s leverage over a strategic technology — monetised in real time.
“This is a striking example of how global market access can now come with a toll gate – and the toll collector is often a government, not a competitor.”
Why it’s unusual
Export controls usually operate as a blunt instrument: either the market is open, or it’s closed. A revenue-share arrangement blurs that line, turning a security restriction into an ongoing financial transaction. It also sets a precedent that could be applied elsewhere — biotech, clean energy, even defence — creating a global network of political toll booths.
The political choreography is equally telling. The deal came just days after Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang met President Donald Trump, underscoring the increasingly transactional nature of US trade policy. In this environment, market access isn’t just negotiated in trade ministries — it’s brokered in the Oval Office.
Implications for Nvidia and AMD
The agreement restores immediate access to a market where domestic Chinese AI chips remain behind on performance. Analysts estimate Nvidia alone could recover around USD 8 billion per quarter in revenue that was previously off the table.
But the price is more than the 15% cut. Margins will take a hit, and political risk hasn’t disappeared — it’s simply been repriced. Beijing could still impose its own restrictions, while US policy could shift again after the next election cycle. State-affiliated Chinese media have already accused Nvidia’s chips of containing “backdoor” vulnerabilities, claims the company denies.
“Winning back revenue is not the same as regaining control – especially when a customer and your own government can both change the terms of engagement at any time.”
From risk to opportunity – the investor’s lens
For investors, this isn’t a simple “good news” or “bad news” moment — it’s a spectrum of possible futures.
In the bullish case, Chinese demand for the H20 and MI308 runs strong beyond 2026, the levy is absorbed into pricing, and surging global AI infrastructure spend keeps earnings momentum intact.
More likely is probably a middle-ground outcome: sales rebound in the next year, but Beijing accelerates local chip production, narrowing the revenue window by late decade.
The real downside risk is a renewed geopolitical flare-up — fresh export curbs from Washington or a retaliatory ban from Beijing could make the 15% cut irrelevant overnight because the sales vanish.
This is a deal that buys time, not certainty. It gives Nvidia and AMD a near-term revenue boost and keeps Chinese customers in their ecosystem — but it also cements government policy as a direct cost of doing business.
“The calculus now isn’t just about selling the best chip — it’s about navigating the most complex political terrain in modern trade.”
Bigger picture – a shifting trade playbook
The precedent here matters. If Washington sees success in this approach, the model could extend to other high-value sectors. For the semiconductor industry, it underscores that profitability and strategic autonomy are now tightly bound to the political climate. For retail investors, it’s a reminder that in AI and advanced tech, earnings projections are as sensitive to trade negotiations as they are to product roadmaps.
The road ahead
Whether this becomes a one-off compromise or a standard tool in US trade policy will determine its long-term impact. If China responds with its own conditions or accelerates domestic chip capabilities, the current opportunity could shrink quickly. The next headlines to watch:
- Beijing’s formal policy response, especially any moves to subsidise local AI chip production.
- The White House testing this model in other export-heavy sectors.
- Broader market factors such as August inflation data and Fed policy, which could affect valuations across big tech.
Short-term wins, long-term rules still unwritten
This deal is more than a corporate earnings story – it’s a snapshot of a new global trade reality where borders function as checkpoints with negotiable tolls. For Nvidia and AMD, the short-term victory is clear: re-entry into a vital market. But in securing that access, they’ve also signalled that even the most innovative companies can be drawn into political bargaining.
For investors, the takeaway is to treat policy as part of the profit equation. The competitive edge in this era may not be just faster chips, but faster adaptation to political reality. The companies that master both will be the ones still standing when the rules inevitably change again.
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