Nvidia begins Vera CPU sales pitch to Chinese clients
Key takeaways
- Nvidia’s market share in China has effectively fallen to zero, its CEO Jensen Huang said in October, hurt by U.S. export controls on advanced chips and Beijing’s push for self-reliance in key technologies.
- The move also raises the stakes in its competition with major CPU firms Intel and AMD, which are racing to increase supplies of server CPUs for AI data centres.
- The sources said some Chinese clients have shown interest in the Vera chip, Nvidia’s first standalone central processing unit (CPU) built for agentic AI — systems that perform tasks autonomously.
Why this matters: local context for readers following news across Pakistan and the region.
Add ARY News on Google AAResize Nvidia has told Chinese clients that its new “Vera” central processors for AI data centres could be available as soon as August and that they can begin placing orders, three sources familiar with the matter said.
The outreach underscores how the world’s most valuable company is quickly pivoting to the new product to revive its rapidly declining fortunes in China, as shipments of its second-most powerful AI chip, the H200, to the country have stalled for months.
Nvidia’s market share in China has effectively fallen to zero, its CEO Jensen Huang said in October, hurt by U.S. export controls on advanced chips and Beijing’s push for self-reliance in key technologies.