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Kevin O'Leary Warns US Making A 'Strategic Mistake,' Says 'Restricting Nvidia Chips Doesn't Hurt China' But Helps Rivals Build Their Own AI Stack

BenzingaDecember 04, 2025 at 6:20 AMFull Content
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Gist

Kevin O'Leary argues that restricting U.S. AI chip exports to China backfires, urging global sales to strengthen American technological dominance by attracting top talent and locking in global reliance on U.S. hardware.

LLM Summary

Entrepreneur Kevin O'Leary warns that restricting sales of Nvidia and AMD AI chips to China is a strategic mistake, as it accelerates China's push for self-reliance in chip technology. He advocates for unrestricted global sales to identify and attract top global talent to the U.S., drawing parallels to post-WWII scientific recruitment. This approach, he says, ensures long-term American leadership in AI by embedding U.S. technology into global innovation ecosystems.

Full Article Content

Entrepreneur and investor Kevin O'Leary said Wednesday that selling U.S. AI chips to all countries, including rivals, is the best way to maintain long-term American technological dominance.

O'Leary Warns Restrictions On Nvidia And AMD Could Backfire

O'Leary, also known as "Mr. Wonderful" from Shark Tank, shared his views on X while posting a video, arguing that restricting sales of chips from companies like Nvidia Corp. (NASDAQ: NVDA) and Advanced Micro Devices Inc. (NYSE: AMD) could hurt U.S. interests.

"Restricting Nvidia and AMD chips doesn't hurt China; it just pushes them to build their own stack. That's a strategic mistake," he said.

Selling AI Chips Globally Could Identify Top Talent For The US

In the video, he elaborated: "The whole idea in order to win AI data supremacy is to sell everybody everything and then force them, because of the technology, to develop their stacks on American chips. All of them. That’s how you win."

He drew a historical parallel, noting the U.S. recruitment of German scientists after World War II.

"Those rocket scientists… moved from Germany to the United States because they wanted to move their families there, he said.

He added, And all of a sudden, that resource was built on American hardware, American ingenuity."

O'Leary emphasized that selling chips globally would allow the U.S. to identify top talent and attract them to the country, strengthening its innovation ecosystem.

"Give everybody everything and identify the winners. Because you have a better place to live, you move them into the United States.

That's how you win the technology war," he said.

If America wants to win the AI race, we need to stop holding back our technology. Sell our chips to everyone, even our adversaries. When the world builds on U.S. hardware, we control the platform and stay years ahead.
Restricting Nvidia and AMD chips doesn't hurt China; it just… pic.twitter.com/7tpC9cC4Z2
— Kevin O'Leary aka Mr. Wonderful (@kevinolearytv) December 3, 2025

US Restrictions And China's Self-Reliance Put Nvidia Under Pressure

China effectively shut Nvidia out of its AI-chip market after years of dominance, a shift CEO Jensen Huang described as moving "from 95% market share to 0%."

Beijing's ban on foreign AI chips in new state projects, stricter port checks, and a national push to expand domestic chip production left China with oversupply and little need for new Nvidia shipments.

Last month, major U.S. cloud providers Amazon.com, Inc. (NASDAQ: AMZN)  and Microsoft Corporation (NASDAQ: MSFT) supported the Gain AI Act, a proposal to further restrict advanced chip exports to China, a rare break from Nvidia, which called the policy "self-defeating."

The Trump administration also blocked Nvidia's scaled-down B30A chip, saying it still had capabilities suitable for training large language models.

In September, White House adviser David Sacks added to the debate, warning that excessive limits could strengthen Chinese rivals like Huawei, which was already developing competing AI chips and reducing reliance on U.S. hardware.

Metadata

Author:
Snigdha Gairola
Image URL:
https://cdn.benzinga.com/files/imagecache/1024x768xUP/images/story/2025/12/04/Los-Angeles---Sep-23-Barbara-Corcoran--L.jpeg
Tickers:
AMD, AMZN, MSFT, NVDA
Updated At:
December 04, 2025 at 2:20 AM
Benzinga Channels:
Tech
Benzinga Tags:
benzinga neuro, Donald Trump, Jensen Huang, Kevin O’Leary
Teaser:
Kevin O'Leary believes that selling AI chips globally is key to maintaining American dominance in technology.O'Leary advises against restricting sales of AI chips to China, arguing it would push them to develop their own and hurt US interests.
Benzinga Stocks:
AMD (NASDAQ), AMZN (NASDAQ), MSFT (NASDAQ), NVDA (NASDAQ)
Benzinga Article ID:
49201591