The US expanded the restriction of exports of sophisticated Nvidia artificial intelligence chips beyond China to other regions including some countries in the Middle East, the company said in a regulatory filing this week.
“During the second quarter of fiscal year 2024, the USG (US government) informed us of an additional licensing requirement for a subset of A100 and H100 products destined to certain customers and other regions, including some countries in the Middle East,” Nvidia said in the filing.
Nvidia did not specify which countries in the Middle East were affected.
The company got most of its US$13.5 billion ($20.8 billion) in sales in its most recent fiscal quarter ended July 30 from the United States, China and Taiwan.
About 13.9 percent of sales came from all other countries combined, and Nvidia does not provide a revenue breakout from the Middle East.
Nvidia did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
The US Commerce department, which normally administers new licensing requirements on exports, did not immediately return a request for comment.
One year ago Nvidia said US officials told it to stop exporting the same two computing chips for AI work to China.
The move was seen as potentially slowing Chinese firms’ ability to carry out advanced work like image recognition.
The announcement also signalled at that time a major escalation of the US crackdown on China’s technological capabilities as tensions bubble over the fate of Taiwan, where chips for Nvidia and almost every other major chip firm are manufactured.
The securities filing, posted August 28, did not detail which countries are newly restricted from receiving chips.