Dec 31 (Reuters) - Nvidia is scrambling to meet strong demand for its H200 artificial intelligence chips from Chinese technology companies and has approached contract manufacturer Taiwan Semiconductor
Manufacturing Co to ramp up production, sources said.
Chinese technology companies have placed orders for more than 2 million H200 chips for 2026, while Nvidia currently holds just 700,000 units in stock, two of the people said.
The exact additional volume Nvidia intends to order from TSMC remains unclear, they said. A third source said Nvidia has asked TSMC to begin production of the additional chips, and work is expected to start in the second quarter of 2026.
The moves raise concerns over whether there could be further tightening in global AI chip supplies as Nvidia now has to strike the right balance between meeting robust Chinese demand and addressing constrained supplies elsewhere.
They could also intensify risks for Nvidia, as Beijing has yet to greenlight any shipments of H200 chips. The administration of U.S. President Donald Trump only recently allowed exports of the H200 to China.
The talks between Nvidia and TSMC and details of the Chinese demand have not been reported before. The pricing has also not been reported earlier - Nvidia has decided which H200 variants it will offer to Chinese clients and price them around $27,000 per chip, the sources said.
Nvidia said in response to a request for comment that it continuously manages its supply chain.
"Licensed sales of the H200 to authorised customers in China will have no impact on our ability to supply customers in the United States," a spokesperson said.
"China is a highly competitive market with rapidly growing local chip suppliers. Blocking all U.S. exports undercut our national and economic security and only benefited foreign competition."
TSMC declined to comment and China's Ministry of Industry and Information Technology did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Reuters spoke to five people for this story, who declined to be named as the discussions are private.
The potential order would mark a significant expansion of H200 production at a time when Nvidia has been focused on ramping up its newer Blackwell and upcoming Rubin chip lines. The H200, part of Nvidia's previous-generation Hopper architecture, uses TSMC's 4-nanometer manufacturing process.
Nvidia plans to fulfil initial orders from existing stock with the first batch of H200 chips expected to arrive before the Lunar New Year holiday in mid-February, Reuters reported earlier this month.
CHINESE TECH GIANTS DRIVE DEMAND
The bulk of the orders of over 2 million chips for 2026 has come from major Chinese internet companies, which view the H200 as a significant upgrade over chips currently available to them, two of the people said.
Of Nvidia's current 700,000-unit inventory, around 100,000 are GH200 Grace Hopper superchips, which combine Nvidia's Grace CPU with the Hopper GPU architecture, while the remainder are standalone H200 chips, one of them said.
Both variants will be offered to Chinese clients, the person said.
While Nvidia has indicated a pricing ballpark to the Chinese customers, it would vary based on purchase volume and specific customer arrangements, said two of the people.
An eight-chip module is expected to cost around 1.5 million yuan, making it slightly more expensive than the now-unavailable H20 module, which previously sold for around 1.2 million yuan, they said.
However, given that the H200 delivers roughly six times the performance of the H20 - a downgraded chip Nvidia designed specifically for the Chinese market that was later blocked by Beijing from being shipped into China - the sources said Chinese internet firms view the pricing as attractive.
The price also represents a roughly 15% discount compared to grey-market alternatives, which currently retail at over 1.75 million yuan, according to the sources.
ByteDance plans to spend about 100 billion yuan on Nvidia's chips in 2026, up from roughly 85 billion yuan in 2025, if China allows H200 sales, the South China Morning Post reported on Wednesday, citing sources.
REGULATORY UNCERTAINTY PERSISTS
The planned shipments follow Trump's decision earlier this month to allow H200 sales to China with a 25% fee, reversing the Biden administration's ban on advanced AI chip exports to China.
However, Chinese officials are still deciding whether to allow H200 imports amid concerns that access to advanced foreign chips could slow development of the domestic AI semiconductor industry.
But they have not signaled immediate opposition. While Chinese chipmakers have managed to come up with products that rival the H20 in performance, there are not yet any equivalents of the H200.
One proposal under consideration would require bundling each H200 purchase with a certain ratio of domestically produced chips, Reuters previously reported.
(Reporting by Liam Mo, Wen-Yee Lee and Brenda Goh; Editing by Muralikumar Anantharaman)








