Inside Taiwan

Why Is The Global AI War Now A Battle Of 'Ferrari vs. Prius'?

This episode of Inside Taiwan analyzes the new Pax Silica alliance between the U.S. and Taiwan and Jensen Huang’s updates on Nvidia operations. We examine the shift in investor sentiment toward AI monetization, the looming memory chip shortage reported by SK Hynix, and China’s energy-backed strategy to bypass export controls.

What is the Pax Silica declaration regarding the semiconductor supply chain?
It is a bilateral agreement to secure the chip industry against geopolitical risks. The U.S. State Department designated Taiwan a vital partner. Taiwanese companies plan to invest $250 billion in the U.S. while American firms like Nvidia and Micron are investing over $15 billion in Taiwan.

Did Nvidia confirm new AI chip orders from Chinese tech giants?
No. CEO Jensen Huang confirmed that reports of H200 orders from Alibaba and ByteDance are fake news. He stated the chip is waiting for regulatory approval in Beijing. Nvidia is instead focusing on Taiwan with a new $105 million headquarters approved by the Ministry of Economic Affairs.

Why are investors reacting differently to Meta and Microsoft AI spending?
Wall Street now demands immediate revenue from AI investments. Meta stock jumped nearly 20 percent because AI improved ad targeting revenue. Microsoft stock fell because investors did not see a quick enough payoff from its heavy spending on OpenAI and supercomputers.

How does the AI boom affect the global supply of memory chips?
A shortage of standard chips is emerging. Samsung and SK Hynix are converting production lines to make high-bandwidth memory for AI servers. SK Hynix reported that PC and smartphone manufacturers are finding it difficult to secure standard DRAM components.

What is the impact of data center expansion on industrial power equipment?
Demand for backup power is surging. Caterpillar reported a 23 percent increase in sales for generator sets driven by data center construction. This AI-driven demand is helping the industrial giant offset trade headwinds in other sectors.

How is China circumventing U.S. restrictions on advanced AI hardware?
China is adopting a brute force strategy using domestic chips and massive energy supplies. They are also exporting efficient software models like Deepseek to global markets. This creates an alternative ecosystem for countries that do not require top-tier U.S. hardware.

Listen to the full analysis on the Inside Taiwan podcast.

What is Inside Taiwan?

Inside Taiwan distills 200 stories a day from over 30 trusted Traditional Chinese and English sources into a ten-minute executive briefing on semiconductors, AI, and energy, shaping the world’s most valuable supply chain. It’s an AI-powered signal over noise for global investors and decision-makers. New episodes every Monday to Thursday, weekly.