Key Highlights
- Huawei introduced its Atlas 350 AI accelerator featuring the Ascend 950PR processor
- The company asserts the Atlas 350 achieves 1.56 petaflops in FP4 performance — nearly 3x Nvidia’s H20 capability
- Last week, Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang announced H200 chip production resumption for the Chinese market
- KeyBanc projects China represents a potential $30 billion opportunity for Nvidia through approximately 1.5 million H200 unit sales
- Despite a 1.6% premarket gain Monday, Nvidia shares closed the session down 3.28%
Huawei has unveiled a cutting-edge AI accelerator that the company claims substantially exceeds the capabilities of Nvidia’s most advanced chips available in China. The announcement comes just days after Nvidia revealed it had resumed production of H200 processors specifically for Chinese customers.
The Atlas 350 represents Huawei’s latest AI accelerator card, engineered around its proprietary Ascend 950PR processor. The hardware targets AI inference workloads — the computational process that generates results from already-trained artificial intelligence models. These applications span search engine recommendations, conversational AI responses from large language models, and cross-platform content creation.
During Huawei’s China Partner Conference on Friday, company VP Ma Haixu introduced the new accelerator card. Zhang Dixuan, who leads Huawei’s Ascend computing division, highlighted the flagship specification: 1.56 petaflops of FP4 computational throughput.
According to Huawei’s metrics, this represents a 2.8-fold performance advantage over Nvidia’s H20 processor — currently the most powerful chip Nvidia can legally distribute in China under existing U.S. export control regulations.
Nvidia Confronts Fresh Competition in Strategic Chinese Market
Nvidia’s chief executive Jensen Huang disclosed last week that the company had resumed H200 processor manufacturing destined for Chinese buyers and had already begun accepting purchase orders. The H200 occupies a middle tier in Nvidia’s product hierarchy — more capable than the H20 but less powerful than the company’s latest Blackwell architecture.
Huang has previously characterized China as representing a $50 billion annual addressable market for AI computing infrastructure, expanding at a 50% yearly growth rate. According to KeyBanc analyst John Vinh’s projections, Chinese enterprises could potentially purchase approximately 1.5 million H200 chips throughout this year if large-scale sales receive regulatory approval — translating to roughly $30 billion in prospective revenue.
This substantial revenue opportunity carries significant weight for Nvidia, whose stock has struggled to break out of its recent trading range and requires positive catalysts.
Nvidia shares climbed 1.6% during Monday’s premarket session, buoyed by broader market optimism following President Trump’s announcement of ongoing negotiations between the U.S. and Iran toward a potential agreement. However, by market close, NVDA had reversed course, finishing down 3.28%.
Evaluating Huawei’s Competitive Position
Performance comparisons between AI processors present inherent complications. Varying system configurations, workload types, and testing methodologies can yield dramatically different benchmark results. Previous Huawei AI server implementations have faced scrutiny regarding elevated power consumption relative to comparable Nvidia systems.
Nevertheless, the availability of a viable domestic alternative holds considerable strategic importance within China’s technology ecosystem. Organizations that might otherwise source Nvidia processors now have access to a locally-produced option — one immune to uncertainties surrounding U.S. export policy decisions.
Huawei’s progress reflects sustained investment in this direction. The Ascend 950PR processor debuted in September 2025 as a component of the company’s three-year strategic roadmap. Following U.S. sanctions, Huawei has systematically developed its AI semiconductor portfolio without reliance on American technology.
Regarding storage infrastructure, Huawei announced planned enhancements to its OceanStor Dorado and Pacific 9926 platforms scheduled for this year, alongside the forthcoming FusionCube A1000 cabinet designed for small and medium enterprise AI implementations.
“The initial phase of the AI revolution centered on raw computational capacity, but the next chapter will pivot toward data management and utilization,” stated Yuan Yuan, president of Huawei’s data storage division.
Nvidia’s decision to restart H200 production for China and KeyBanc’s $30 billion revenue projection represent the most tangible recent indicators of what’s at stake in this competitive landscape.



