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Nvidia’s first China H200 shipments put customer concentration in focus
15 July 2026
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Nvidia’s first China H200 shipments put customer concentration in focus

SAN FRANCISCO, July 15, 2026, 04:07 PDT

NVIDIA Corporation has started limited H200 shipments to China while a Financial Times report said it had cut more than half of its approved Asian buyers. Yet the latest accounts point to a sharper investor issue: three direct buyers produced 54% of first-quarter revenue, while customers headquartered in the United States accounted for 78%.

The China restart is not yet a forecast event. Jeffrey Kessler, the Commerce Department official who oversees export controls, told lawmakers that H200 exports were “very few” and “minimal.” Nvidia’s $91 billion fiscal second-quarter outlook assumes no China data-center compute revenue, making the first deliveries potential upside rather than part of its forecast baseline. Reuters

The white-list move runs the other way. More than half of Nvidia’s previous Asian customers, particularly neo-clouds, specialist firms that rent AI computing capacity, failed the initial review after tighter checks in Singapore, Malaysia and Japan, the FT reported. Those buyers can reapply. Reuters said it could not independently verify the report, while Nvidia and the Commerce Department did not immediately comment. The revenue attached to the rejected accounts was not disclosed.

Nvidia now reports geographic revenue by the headquarters of direct customers, which can differ from the end user or shipping address. Approximate customer-dollar figures below apply the company’s rounded percentage disclosures to quarterly revenue.

MetricQ1 FY2027Q1 FY2026Change
Total revenue$81.6 billion$44.1 billion+85%
Share from disclosed 10%-plus direct customers54% (~$44.1 billion)30% (~$13.2 billion)+24 percentage points
U.S.-headquartered customer share78.1%58.3%+19.8 percentage points
China, including Hong Kong, revenue$4.55 billion, or 5.6%$9.66 billion, or 21.9%-52.9%

The count is not the revenue. Sales represented by Nvidia’s disclosed 10%-plus direct customers increased by about $30.9 billion from a year earlier, roughly equal to 70% of the company’s entire prior-year quarterly revenue. That suggests the Asian review may reduce customer breadth more than near-term sales, though Nvidia has not disclosed the removed firms’ order books.

The data-center mix points in the same direction. That business produced $75.2 billion, or 92% of company revenue, in the quarter ended April 26.

Data-center marketQ1 FY2027Q1 FY2026Year-on-year growthFY2027 share
Hyperscale$37.9 billion$17.6 billion+115%50.3%
AI Clouds, Industrial & Enterprise$37.4 billion$21.5 billion+74%49.7%
Total data center$75.2 billion$39.1 billion+92%100%

The second line, known as ACIE, includes AI clouds, industrial and enterprise buyers. The affected neo-clouds would generally fall in that pool, although Nvidia has not tied rejected names to a reporting category. A slower ACIE ramp could push more business toward hyperscalers, the largest public clouds and consumer-internet groups. That may protect volume but give fewer buyers more sway over delivery schedules and terms.

Ahead of Wednesday’s U.S. open, Nvidia’s last close was $211.80, up 4.1% on Tuesday, against a 0.9% rise in the Nasdaq. The price action does not prove investors dismissed the white-list report because chip shares rallied broadly, but the news did not trigger a selloff. KeyBanc Capital Markets analyst John Vinh also raised his price target to $330 and saw limited risk to estimates from a slight Rubin delay, as more Blackwell B300 shipments could fill the gap.

Chief Executive Jensen Huang said in May that the AI infrastructure buildout “is accelerating at extraordinary speed.” The first-quarter figures bear out the pace, with data-center revenue up 92%. They also show where the growth landed: hyperscale supplied half of data-center sales, and three direct customers supplied more than half of company revenue. NVIDIA Newsroom

But the balance could change fast. Removed buyers may hold more ACIE orders than their number suggests, reapproval could take longer, and Kessler said further chip and AI regulation was coming. Nvidia had $119 billion of manufacturing and capacity commitments and $25.8 billion of inventory at April 26; three customers made up 64% of outstanding customer bills. A smaller buyer pool can make an order delay hit harder.

For the current quarter, the clean test is whether Nvidia can reach its $91 billion forecast without China data-center compute and keep ACIE near half of data-center sales. The first H200 deliveries are potential upside, not assumed revenue. The approved-buyer list is the concentration measure to watch.

Shan Ahmed Khan is a senior markets reporter at TS2.tech, specializing in stocks, technology and macroeconomic trends. A graduate of the Lahore University of Management Sciences (LUMS), he previously worked in investment research and market analysis. His coverage helps readers understand the key developments influencing global financial markets and emerging industries.

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