US chip curbs give Huawei a chance to fill the Nvidia void in China
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[October 20, 2023] By
Josh Ye
HONG KONG (Reuters) - U.S. measures to limit the export of advanced
artificial intelligence (AI) chips to China may create an opening for
Huawei Technologies to expand in its $7 billion home market as the curbs
force Nvidia to retreat, analysts say.
While Nvidia has historically been the leading provider of AI chips in
China with a market share exceeding 90%, Chinese firms including Huawei
have been developing their own versions of Nvidia’s best-selling chips,
including the A100 and the H100 graphics processing units (GPU).
Huawei's Ascend AI chips are comparable to Nvidia's in terms of raw
computing power, analysts and some AI firms such as China's iFlyTek say,
but they still lag behind in performance.
Jiang Yifan, chief market analyst at brokerage Guotai Junan Securities,
said another key limiting factor for Chinese firms was the reliance of
most projects on Nvidia's chips and software ecosystem, but that could
change with the U.S. restrictions.
"This U.S. move, in my opinion, is actually giving Huawei's Ascend chips
a huge gift," Jiang said in a post on his social media Weibo account.
This opportunity, however, comes with several challenges.
Many cutting edge AI projects are built with CUDA, a popular programming
architecture Nvidia has pioneered, which has in turn given rise to a
massive global ecosystem that has become capable of training highly
sophisticated AI models such as OpenAI's GPT-4.
Huawei own version is called CANN, and analysts say it is much more
limited in terms of the AI models it is capable of training, meaning
that Huawei's chips are far from a plug-and-play substitute for Nvidia.
Woz Ahmed, a former chip design executive turned consultant, said that
for Huawei to win Chinese clients from Nvidia, it must replicate the
ecosystem Nvidia created, including supporting clients to move their
data and models to Huawei's own platform.
Intellectual property rights are also a problem, as many U.S. firms
already hold key patents for GPUs, Ahmed said.
"To get something that's in the ballpark, it is 5 or 10 years," he
added.
Huawei and Nvidia did not immediately respond to Reuters' requests for
comment.
COMPUTING POWER
If Huawei manages to grab Nvidia's market share, it could claim another
victory against the United States, which has targeted the firm with
export controls since 2019.
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A logo of Huawei Technologies is seen at its exhibition space, at
the Viva Technology conference dedicated to innovation and startups
at Porte de Versailles exhibition center in Paris, France June 15,
2022. REUTERS/Benoit Tessier/File Photo/File Photo
Huawei rolled out the first Ascend GPUs that year and it is one of a
number of products - such as its Harmony operating system - that the
company says are entirely homegrown.
Over the past year, the telecoms giant has shown signs that it is
beating back against the U.S. curbs by unveiling an advanced
smartphone chip and making claims of breakthroughs in chip design
tools.
It has also set its sights on becoming a key provider of computing
power for AI, with Chief Financial Officer Meng Wanzhou saying last
month that Huawei wanted to build a computing base for China and
give the world a "second option", in a veiled reference to dominant
provider the United States.
Huawei's partners in China so far include iFlyTek, a leading Chinese
AI software company which is using the Ascend 910 to train its AI
models. IFlyTek was also blacklisted by the United States in 2019.
On Thursday, during iFlyTek's earnings call, Senior Vice President
Jiang Tao said the Ascend 910B's capabilities were "comparable to
Nvidia's A100" and announced that it was developing a
general-purpose AI infrastructure in China alongside Huawei.
"Our partnership now aims to enable domestically developed LLMs to
be built with both homegrown hardware and software technology,"
Jiang said.
Other partners include state-owned software firms Tsinghua Tongfang
and Digital China. At a conference in July, Huawei said its AI chips
now help power more than 30 large language models (LLM) in China,
which is going through a generative AI craze and currently has more
than 130 LLMs.
Charlie Chai, an analyst with 86Research, said Nvidia's ecosystem
dominance was not "an insurmountable obstacle if domestic players
are given sufficient time and a big customer base".
China's self-sufficiency push, which has been championed by
President Xi Jinping, is likely to aid this. "In short, a small
disruption to near-term supplies, but a big boost to the long-term
self-sufficiency agenda," Chai added.
($1 = $1.0000)
(Reporting by Josh Ye; Editing by Brenda Goh and Miral Fahmy)
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