Huawei’s new CloudMatrix 384 supercomputer has outperformed NVIDIA’s platform on key metrics, signaling a significant shift in global AI capabilities amid tightening US export controls. Chinese tech giant Huawei’s CloudMatrix 384 delivers more than double the computing power compared to NVIDIA’s offering.
This breakthrough comes as US restrictions, including a Trump-era ban on exports of the NVIDIA H20 chip specifically designed for China, severely impact the American company. NVIDIA was forced to write off $5.5 billion in inventory and projects $15 billion in lost revenue due to these export bans limiting access to the vital Chinese market.
The CloudMatrix platform utilizes 384 domestically-produced Ascend 910C chips. It boasts 3.6 times the memory capacity and 2.1 times the memory bandwidth of NVIDIA’s comparable system. Huawei has already deployed these clusters across data centers in 16 Chinese provinces and is developing a homegrown software stack rivaling NVIDIA’s programming tools, enabling China to compete independently in the global AI race.
Valued at an estimated $128 billion, Huawei’s push represents a massive bet reshaping the tech landscape. The company is capitalizing on its freedom from US restrictions to secure lucrative data center deals in key markets like Brazil and Saudi Arabia, positioning itself strongly in regions wary of US technological dominance.
Huawei’s advance is fueling a global trend toward “sovereign AI,” driving efforts in Europe and the Middle East. In these emerging markets, Huawei benefits from not being subject to US export controls, granting it a competitive edge over NVIDIA.
This development is causing significant market concern. Analysts warn major tech indices could see US firm underperformance if China’s market remains restricted while its domestic alternatives gain global traction. Investors are reassessing exposure to US-centric tech giants as China demonstrates it can not only survive without American chips but potentially build superior alternatives.
Testing by China’s DeepSeek AI team revealed Huawei’s Ascend 910C chips deliver 60% of the performance of NVIDIA’s flagship H100 chip, achieving “unexpectedly good” results. Crucially, DeepSeek converted its systems from NVIDIA’s software to Huawei’s with just one line of code. If Huawei can close the remaining 40% performance gap while leveraging cost and supply chain advantages, the world faces the prospect of two distinct AI ecosystems.
With over 100 countries still undecided between American and Chinese technological ecosystems, the global tech leadership battle is intensifying, challenging Silicon Valley’s long-standing monopoly.




