Nvidia Just Made a Major Move for 2026. Time to Buy?

Nvidia Just Made a Major Move for 2026. Time to Buy?


  • Nvidia has delivered record earnings in recent years as demand for its AI chips skyrocketed.

  • But recent exclusion from one major market has kept the tech giant from reaching its full potential.

  • 10 stocks we like better than Nvidia ›

Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA) delivered top-notch performance over the past two years, with the stock climbing more than 200% over that time period. This is thanks to the company’s position in the artificial intelligence (AI) market, one that’s on the road to reach into the trillions of dollars in just a few years. Nvidia’s dominance in AI chips and related products and services has helped the company’s earnings soar to records.

But one problem weighed on Nvidia throughout most of 2025, and that was sales of chips to China. The U.S. had tightened export controls on chips to that country, and as a result, Nvidia reported a billion-dollar charge earlier in the year for chips that it couldn’t sell. Nvidia chief Jensen Huang says China’s AI chip market could represent hundreds of billions of dollars by the end of the decade, so this clearly is a market that chip companies want to access.

A few weeks ago, President Donald Trump gave Nvidia the OK for sales of its H200 chip to China — and just recently, Nvidia made a related move that could be big for 2026. Let’s check it out and determine if now is a good moment to get in on the stock.

An investor looks at something on a laptop in a darkened office.
Image source: Getty Images.

So, first, a bit more background on the Nvidia-China situation. The U.S. initially placed controls on exports to that country and certain others for security reasons back in 2022. In response to that, Nvidia designed the H20 chip to specifically meet guidelines and was able to sell that product in China. In the fiscal 2025 full year, sales to China represented 13% of Nvidia’s overall revenue.

But last year, as mentioned, the U.S. halted sales of even the H20, leaving Nvidia and other U.S. chip designers excluded from the Chinese market.

Meanwhile, Nvidia continued to deliver solid growth, suggesting that even without sales to China, the company could score an AI win for investors. In the latest quarter, for example, Nvidia’s revenue soared 62% to $57 billion amid solid demand for its Blackwell platform. And Nvidia continued to generate strong profitability on sales, maintaining gross margin above 70%. Still, the picture likely would have been even brighter if Nvidia had been able to serve customers in China.

Several weeks ago, Trump announced that Nvidia may return to the China market — this time with the H200, which is more powerful than the H20 but less powerful than Nvidia’s Blackwell chips. As part of the deal, Nvidia must offer 25% of its China chip sales to the U.S.


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