China’s RTX 5090D V2 Ban Tightens Nvidia’s China Squeeze


TL;DR

  • Customs Block: China appears to have stopped Nvidia’s China-only RTX 5090D V2 GPU at customs during Jensen Huang’s Beijing visit.
  • Workaround Limit: Nvidia designed the card in August 2025 to fit U.S. export rules, yet it may still face China-side approval barriers.
  • Market Stakes: Blocked H200 deliveries and Huawei’s projected gains show Nvidia risks losing more ground in China’s AI chip market.

China appears to have blocked Nvidia’s RTX 5090D V2 while Nvidia chief executive Jensen Huang was in Beijing last week, creating a new obstacle for a company still trying to keep chip sales alive in China.

China appears to have placed the model on a banned-goods list at customs checkpoints on May 16.

The reported stop is material because the RTX 5090D V2 was built as a China-specific fallback after U.S. export rules cut Nvidia off from selling many higher-end chips there.

Why Nvidia’s China Workaround Still Hit a Wall

Nvidia introduced the RTX 5090D V2 in August 2025 to comply with U.S. export controls. August 2025 needs to stay in view because it shows the company had already redesigned hardware for China well before the latest reported customs problem surfaced.

A lower memory capacity and bandwidth profile made the China-only card a constrained version of Nvidia’s flagship line rather than a standard launch. Chinese gamers and 3D artists were the obvious buyers, but AI developers also bought it after access to Nvidia’s stronger hardware narrowed. Huang used a Bloomberg interview to strike a more optimistic tone: “My sense is that over time, the market will open.”