I wrote a post forecasting Chinese compute acquisition in 2026. The very short summary is that I expect about 60% to be legally imported NVIDIA H200s, with domestically produced Huawei Ascends accounting for about 25%, and the remainder being smuggled AI chips and Ascends illegally fabricated outside China via proxies.
While China likely produces GPU dies in quite large quantities, it is likely bottlenecked by an HBM shortage, which limits the total number of Ascend 910Cs and other AI chips that can actually be assembled. I do expect domestic production to grow substantially in 2027 and 2028, as CXMT ramps up HBM production.
In total, I expect China to acquire about 320,000 B300-equivalents (90% CI: 150,000 to 600,000) in 2026, enough to train about six Grok-4-scale models simultaneously. By comparison, the Stargate campus that Oracle has been building for OpenAI in Abilene, Texas will alone house over 300,000 B300-equivalents.
Some Chinese companies are also renting AI chips from non-Chinese cloud providers. For example, according to SemiAnalysis, ByteDance is Oracle’s largest customer; their largest joint cluster, located in Southeast Asia, will perhaps reach about 250,000 B300-equivalents this summer. (I don’t count remote access as “acquisition” since there is no ownership.)
NB. These estimates are quite rough, so take them with a grain of salt. But I think they give a good sense of the general size of these different pathways.