【Text by Observers Net, Liu Bai】 Amid reports of a visit to China next week, NVIDIA CEO Huang Renxun visited the White House on July 10 local time to meet with U.S. President Trump, but the specific content of the meeting has not been disclosed publicly. A spokesperson for NVIDIA refused to comment on this.
According to CNBC, this meeting took place as NVIDIA's stock rose slightly on the 10th, becoming the first company to exceed a $4 trillion market capitalization on a trading day, surpassing Apple and Microsoft, achieving this symbolic milestone.
Bloomberg reported that investors have shown sustained enthusiasm for the AI boom, which has also driven up the entire tech sector. Due to the rapid growth in demand for AI, NVIDIA chip sales have surged, and tech giants such as Microsoft, Meta, Amazon, and Alphabet, the parent company of Google, are expected to invest about $350 billion in capital expenditures in the next fiscal year.
On the morning of the 10th, Trump praised NVIDIA's stock performance on social media.
"Since Trump's tariffs, NVIDIA has risen 47%. The United States is generating billions of dollars in revenue from tariffs," Trump wrote on "Truth Social," saying, "This country is now 'back on top.'"

On June 11, Huang Renxun attended the 9th VivaTech Tech Startup and Innovation Expo in Paris. Visual China
Notably, according to a report by the Financial Times, shortly after this meeting with Trump, Huang Renxun plans to visit China again next week.
According to insiders, Huang Renxun plans to attend the China International Supply Chain Promotion Expo held in Beijing on Wednesday next week (July 16), during which he may meet with Chinese senior leaders.
Additionally, NVIDIA plans to launch a new artificial intelligence chip specifically designed for China as early as September this year.
It is said that this new chip is a modified version of NVIDIA's existing Blackwell RTX Pro 6000 processor, removing some of the most advanced technologies, such as high-bandwidth memory (HBM) and NVLink, which improve interconnect performance and accelerate data transmission, to comply with the tightened export control regulations by President Trump.
The Financial Times noted that earlier this year, the Trump administration's tightened export controls caused significant damage to NVIDIA's stock price. As NVIDIA tries to retain its position in the key overseas market of China, while being caught in the geopolitical turmoil, Huang Renxun is intensifying efforts to engage in more diplomatic communication with both China and the United States.
Bloomberg also stated that Huang Renxun has consistently publicly expressed that U.S. companies need to enter the world's largest semiconductor market - China, and he himself frequently visits China. His return to China comes at a sensitive moment: as a leading company in AI chips, NVIDIA is deeply involved in the Sino-U.S. technology conflict.
Huang Renxun once called on the U.S. to relax technology export restrictions, believing that these restrictions give unfair advantages to Chinese competitors. He believes that the U.S. regulatory measures have actually excluded NVIDIA from the Chinese market, which is the world's largest chip market, so the company expects to lose up to $8 billion in sales this quarter.
During his visit to China in April, Huang Renxun emphasized that NVIDIA will continue to optimize its product system in compliance with regulatory requirements and remain committed to serving the Chinese market. On April 30, Huang Renxun again stated that he hopes the Trump administration will change the chip export rules, saying, "The world has undergone fundamental changes," and that China is "not behind" in the AI field.
In May this year, Huang Renxun also publicly stated that the U.S. semiconductor export controls on China have already "failed," causing greater harm to U.S. companies than to China.
He described the U.S. government's chip restrictions on China as "costly" in an interview on May 19, stating that it had cost the company $1.5 billion in sales. He frankly said that the idea of preventing other countries from obtaining U.S. technology by restricting the spread of artificial intelligence technology is fundamentally wrong. If U.S. companies do not compete in the Chinese market, then Chinese technology will spread around the world.
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