China’s AI Chips Push Is Facing the Ultimate Test

Is China’s artificial intelligence sector finally taking the plunge and shifting away from Nvidia Corp. in favor of homegrown chips?

Fresh exuberance for domestic alternatives suggests the inflection point has arrived. Blowout earnings from Cambricon Technologies Corp., reports that Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. is testing new AI hardware, and Beijing spurning the return of Nvidia’s made-for-China H20 chips to the market indicate the industry is finally getting on board with the government’s push for self-reliance.

The Information reported that even leading startup DeepSeek is using chips from Shenzhen-based Huawei Technologies Co. to train some models while still using Nvidia’s for its largest and most powerful ones.

Such a paradigm shift has long been Beijing’s priority, even if companies prefer Nvidia’s superior offerings. But the more momentum this movement gains, the more the transition accelerates as developers build and deploy AI models on top of domestic hardware. This allows local firms providing the technology to boost their capacity as well as research and development.

And this time it’s not just blunt government directives pushing the homegrown ecosystem. “Sanctions accelerate. Policy supports. But market realities do the most to force companies to move very quickly,” China tech analyst Rui Ma noted in a post on X. The frenetic pace of AI in the post-DeepSeek era means it makes good business sense for Chinese firms to do what they do best: compete.