China to let Alibaba, ByteDance, DeepSeek buy Nvidia H200 chips

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China to let Alibaba, ByteDance, DeepSeek buy Nvidia H200 chips

Synopsis

China is quietly reversing its self-imposed block on Nvidia H200 GPUs, granting limited purchase rights to Alibaba, ByteDance, and DeepSeek — a calculated concession that exposes just how wide the gap between domestic chips and frontier AI demands has grown.

Key Takeaways

China plans to allow selected firms to purchase Nvidia H200 GPUs after months of self-imposed restrictions, despite Washington approving the chip's export to China in early 2026 .
Alibaba Group Holding , ByteDance (maker of TikTok ), and AI start-up DeepSeek are among the companies informed of coming approvals.
Firms must justify their need for the Nvidia product over locally made alternatives before receiving approval, according to reports.
Analysts describe the move as a 'middle-ground solution' to 'temporarily ease the frontier training bottleneck' while domestic chipmakers catch up.
Shi Shenchang , export-controls lawyer at Shanghai -based Co-Effort Law Firm , noted domestic chips are unlikely to fill China 's computing-power gap in the near term.
The selective approvals keep pressure on domestic suppliers such as Huawei while preventing frontier AI labs from falling further behind global peers.

China is preparing to allow a select group of its most prominent technology companies — including Alibaba Group Holding, ByteDance, and AI start-up DeepSeek — to purchase limited quantities of Nvidia's H200 graphics processing unit, according to a source with knowledge of the matter. The move marks a significant shift in Beijing's posture, which had previously blocked Chinese firms from buying the chip despite Washington approving its export to China in early 2026.

The stand-off that shaped China's AI bottleneck

For months, an unusual impasse defined the global chip landscape: the United States had greenlit Nvidia's H200 GPU for export to China, yet Beijing itself restricted domestic firms from acquiring the hardware as part of a broader tech self-sufficiency drive. The result was a computing-power gap that analysts say has constrained frontier AI model training inside the country.

China may allow H200 imports because domestic chips are unlikely to fill the country's computing-power gap in the near term, said Shi Shenchang, a lawyer focusing on export controls at Shanghai-based Co-Effort Law Firm.

A calculated middle-ground solution

The targeted easing of the ban is likely a 'middle-ground solution' designed to 'temporarily ease the frontier training bottleneck' in China's AI industry, according to analysts. The strategy is seen as buying time for domestic chipmakers to develop their own market-leading devices before any long-term dependence on foreign silicon takes hold.

Companies granted access will not receive a blanket approval — they will reportedly have to justify why they need to purchase the Nvidia product rather than a locally made alternative, according to reports citing The Information.

Who gets access — and on what terms

Beyond Alibaba, the Chinese government has informed ByteDance — the maker of TikTok — and leading AI start-up DeepSeek of the coming approvals, it was reported on Wednesday, 9 July 2026. The allocations are described as limited in number, suggesting a controlled pilot rather than an open-market liberalisation.

The selective nature of the approvals underscores Beijing's intent to calibrate foreign chip access tightly, preserving pressure on domestic suppliers while preventing its frontier AI labs from falling further behind global peers such as OpenAI.

What's next for China's AI hardware race

The policy shift puts renewed pressure on domestic chip champions — most notably Huawei — to accelerate the development of competitive AI accelerators. If homegrown alternatives close the performance gap, Beijing retains the leverage to reimpose restrictions; if they do not, the controlled H200 pipeline may quietly expand.

Watch for whether additional Chinese AI firms receive similar notifications in coming weeks, and whether Washington responds to the shift with any revision of its own export-control posture.

Point of View

The harder it becomes for Beijing to justify reimposing a blanket ban without visibly handicapping its own AI champions.
NationPress
9 Jul 2026

Frequently Asked Questions

Why is China allowing Nvidia H200 chip purchases now?
China is easing its self-imposed ban on Nvidia H200 GPUs because domestic chips are unlikely to fill the country's computing-power gap in the near term, according to Shi Shenchang of Co-Effort Law Firm . Analysts call it a 'middle-ground solution' to temporarily ease the frontier AI training bottleneck while homegrown chipmakers develop competitive alternatives.
Which Chinese companies can buy Nvidia H200 chips?
Alibaba Group Holding , ByteDance , and AI start-up DeepSeek have been informed of coming purchase approvals, according to reports. The allocations are limited in number, and companies must explain why they require the Nvidia product rather than a locally made chip.
Did the US approve Nvidia H200 exports to China?
Washington approved the export of Nvidia 's H200 GPU to China in early 2026 . It was Beijing — not Washington — that had been blocking Chinese firms from purchasing the chip as part of a domestic tech self-sufficiency drive.
How does this affect Huawei and domestic Chinese chipmakers?
The selective approvals maintain pressure on domestic suppliers such as Huawei to accelerate development of competitive AI accelerators. If homegrown chips close the performance gap, Beijing retains leverage to reimpose restrictions; if they do not, the controlled import pipeline may quietly expand.
What is the broader impact on the global AI chip race?
The policy shift signals that even nations pursuing chip self-sufficiency face hard limits when frontier AI training demands outpace domestic hardware capabilities. It also complicates the US-China chip-war dynamic, as Washington 's export approval is now being used — on a restricted basis — by the very government that had previously refused it.
Nation Press
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