March 20, 2026 — NVIDIA is positioning for a return to China’s AI accelerator market after the U.S. Bureau of Industry and Security (BIS) shifted certain advanced-computing export applications to case-by-case license review for China and Macau. The policy change does not guarantee approvals or remove controls, but opens a higher-friction path for compliance-vetted shipments — a development that matters for a company where Data Center revenue reached $62.3 billion in Q4 FY2026, up 93% year-over-year.
Why China matters: Data Center scale and the revenue gap
NVIDIA’s Data Center segment is the company’s primary growth engine. In Q4 FY2026 (quarter ending January 25, 2026), Data Center revenue was $62.3 billion, compared to $35.6 billion in Q4 FY2025. For all of fiscal 2026, total NVIDIA revenue was $215.9 billion, up 65% from $130.5 billion in FY2025.
Metric
Q4 FY2026
Q4 FY2025
Y/Y
Total revenue
$68.1B
$39.3B
+73%
Data Center revenue
$62.3B
$35.6B
+75%
GAAP gross margin
75.0%
73.0%
+2.0 pts
GAAP diluted EPS
$1.76
$0.89
+98%
China has historically been a material but lumpy contributor to Data Center revenue. NVIDIA’s Q1 FY2027 outlook of $78.0 billion explicitly notes the company “is not assuming any Data Center compute revenue from China in its outlook” — underscoring how significant a licensing-enabled China rebound could be if approvals come through.
The policy shift: case-by-case licensing, not an open door
In January 2026, BIS revised its license review policy for advanced computing exports to China and Macau, moving from a presumption of denial to case-by-case review for certain applications. This does not eliminate controls — it means eligible shipments can be evaluated individually based on end-use, end-user risk, and technical parameters.
The framework is built on technical thresholds set in BIS rulemakings, primarily:
– October 2023 interim final rule — tightened advanced computing controls
– April 2024 final rule — updated thresholds and covered destinations
Whether a specific NVIDIA chip clears licensing depends on its performance parameters relative to current BIS thresholds. NVIDIA’s Hopper-generation products (H100, H200) are the most-discussed candidates, but availability for China is a licensing question first, not a product availability question.
Competitive dynamics: Huawei Ascend and domestic alternatives
China’s AI chip market has not stood still during NVIDIA’s limited access period. Huawei’s Ascend ecosystem — including the Ascend 910B and 910C accelerators — has scaled in both hardware supply and software ecosystem (MindSpore, CANN). For inference-heavy workloads, domestic operators have shown willingness to adopt “good enough” performance with predictable supply over peak capability with uncertain availability.
Key competitive considerations:
– CUDA lock-in advantage: NVIDIA’s software ecosystem remains NVIDIA’s deepest moat. Migrating existing training pipelines away from CUDA carries significant retraining cost.
– Inference substitution risk: Lower-intensity inference workloads are more portable. Domestic chips are more competitive here than on large-scale training.
– Supply certainty premium: Chinese hyperscalers and enterprises place high value on supply predictability — a structural advantage for domestically sourced chips regardless of raw performance.
Any NVIDIA China revenue recovery depends on both licensing approvals and on whether customers have already locked in alternative supply chains during the restricted period.
Investor implications: upside scenario vs. structural risk
Upside: Even modest licensing approvals could add meaningful incremental revenue on top of NVIDIA’s $78B Q1 FY2027 baseline (which assumes zero China Data Center compute revenue). China was previously estimated to represent ~20-25% of Data Center revenue before restrictions — any recovery on that base is material.
Risks to watch:
– Approval rates are uncertain — case-by-case review does not imply high approval rates. Policy objectives, end-user sensitivity, and diversion risk all factor in.
– Compliance cost headwinds — know-your-customer requirements, end-use verification, and export compliance infrastructure add cost and operational complexity.
– Policy reversal risk — the export control framework can tighten again. BIS has demonstrated willingness to revise thresholds and review policies based on national security assessments.
– Re-export and diversion enforcement — NVIDIA faces liability exposure if approved shipments are diverted to restricted end-uses or end-users.
Investors should track BIS rule updates, NVIDIA’s quarterly China revenue disclosures (when provided), and any commentary on license approval rates in earnings calls.




















