Nvidia’s AI chips surge in price on China’s black market, with B200 racks fetching 50% premiums

2 hours ago 23

The US government spent years building an elaborate export control regime to keep its most advanced AI chips out of Chinese hands. China’s black market responded with a shrug and a markup.

According to the Financial Times, over $1 billion worth of Nvidia’s advanced AI processors, including the highly restricted B200, H100, and H200 chips, were illicitly funneled into China in just three months following the Trump administration’s tightening of export controls.

The price of prohibition

Nvidia’s B200 racks are reportedly selling on China’s black market for between Rmb 3 million and Rmb 3.5 million, roughly $489,000. That represents a nearly 50% premium over equivalent prices in the US.

The smuggling operations have grown increasingly sophisticated. Shipments are routed through third countries, with Vietnam serving as a particularly popular transit point. Falsified documentation accompanies the hardware, making it difficult for customs authorities to distinguish legitimate commerce from sanctions-busting operations. The deals are happening through a sprawling network of distributors and middlemen concentrated in provinces like Guangdong and Zhejiang.

Why the controls keep failing

US export restrictions targeting advanced AI chips have been in place since 2022, originally designed to prevent China from using cutting-edge semiconductor technology for military applications. The US Department of Justice has pursued enforcement actions related to illegal shipments of A100, H100, and H200 GPUs to China. The Commerce Department has issued new guidance aimed at addressing loopholes exploited by overseas Chinese firms.

What this means for investors

For Nvidia investors, the black market premium confirms that demand for the company’s most advanced chips is genuinely extraordinary, to the point where buyers will pay a 50% surcharge and risk legal consequences to get their hands on the hardware.

One notable detail from the reporting: this black market activity is not being driven by cryptocurrency mining or blockchain-related demand. The buyers are entities across multiple sectors of China’s economy racing to build AI capabilities. That distinction matters because it suggests the demand is structural, not speculative.

Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

Read Entire Article