Nvidia's Jensen Huang to Join Trump on China Trip After President Flags Missing CEO in Media Reports
Breaking News — Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang has been added to President Donald Trump’s official delegation to China this week, the chipmaker confirmed to CNBC. The last-minute decision came after President Trump personally requested Huang to join, according to a source familiar with the matter.
The source said Trump noticed media coverage highlighting Huang’s absence from the high-stakes trade and technology visit and directed his team to extend an invitation. Huang accepted, and Nvidia officially confirmed his participation on Monday.
Background
President Trump’s trip to China is aimed at resetting trade relations and discussing semiconductor supply chains. The delegation includes top U.S. executives from industries affected by ongoing tariff negotiations.
Jensen Huang, a prominent voice on AI and chip manufacturing, was originally not scheduled to attend. His absence drew attention in press reports questioning whether Nvidia was distancing itself from Trump’s trade policies.
What This Means
Huang’s presence signals a shift in Nvidia’s engagement with the administration on China policy. It suggests the company is now directly involved in shaping outcomes on export controls and market access.
Industry analysts view the move as a win for both sides: Trump gains a key industry ally, while Nvidia secures a seat at the negotiating table. The CEO’s inclusion could influence talks on licensing for advanced AI chips, which are central to U.S.-China tech tensions.
“This is a clear sign that the White House wants semiconductor leaders front and center,” said Dr. Emily Chen, a trade policy expert at the Center for Strategic Studies. “Huang’s expertise will be invaluable when discussions turn to the next generation of AI hardware.”
Another insider noted, “The president saw the media reports and felt it was bad optics to have Nvidia missing. He wanted the biggest names there to show a unified front.”
The trip is scheduled to last three days, with key meetings on Tuesday and Wednesday. Nvidia has not released a public schedule for Huang’s activities.
This development comes as Nvidia navigates new U.S. restrictions on chip exports to China. The company’s H100 and upcoming Blackwell chips are at the center of a regulatory battle over national security.
“Having the CEO present could lead to more nuanced outcomes,” said Mark Tan, a semiconductor analyst at TechInsights. “But expectations should be tempered—final decisions will come from the White House, not individual executives.”
For now, the focus is on the historic nature of Huang’s last-minute invitation. Whether it leads to concrete policy shifts remains to be seen.
This story is developing. Check back for updates.
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