刚刚,黄仁勋否认

Core Viewpoint - Nvidia's CEO Jensen Huang refuted claims that the U.S. plans to transfer 40% of Taiwan's semiconductor capacity to the U.S., asserting that the construction of global fabs represents new capacity rather than a transfer of existing capacity [2] Group 1: Semiconductor Capacity and Production - Huang emphasized that TSMC must expand globally to meet the surge in AI-driven chip demand while maintaining Taiwan's core market status [2] - He explained that current wafer demand exceeds Taiwan's physical grid capacity, making overseas production a necessity rather than a political strategy [2] - Despite TSMC's plans to build and expand fabs in the U.S., Europe, and Japan, the majority of production will remain in Taiwan due to its unmatched manufacturing ecosystem [2] Group 2: Importance of Memory and Chip Supply - For Nvidia, substantial capacity in both Taiwan and the U.S. is crucial, with sufficient memory (HBM, DDR5, GDDR7, LPDDR5X, NAND flash) being as important as logic chip capacity [3] - Huang stated that the company is closely collaborating with major HBM suppliers—Samsung, SK Hynix, and Micron—to ensure chip supply for the next-generation AI accelerator, Rubin [3] Group 3: Geopolitical Considerations - Huang discussed the need for legislators to balance three conflicting goals: national security, technological leadership, and economic competitiveness [3] - He refuted comments from Anthropic's CEO regarding the export of advanced AI processors to China, clarifying that the U.S. government has determined that selling Nvidia's H200 processors to Chinese entities does not compromise national security [3] - Huang noted that the approval for these processors to enter the Chinese market now depends on the Chinese government, as Nvidia awaits regulatory approval [3] Group 4: Engagements in Taiwan - During his visit to Taiwan, Huang plans to attend internal Nvidia meetings and Lunar New Year events, as well as meet with TSMC founder Morris Chang and Chairman Mark Liu [3]

刚刚,黄仁勋否认 - Reportify