China wants to build a national AI network, and the price tag runs about $295 billion. The catch matters most to American investors: Nvidia and AMD are largely shut out.
What China Is Building
The plan is still in early talks. It would spend roughly 2 trillion yuan, or about $295 billion, over five years.
That's a state-led bet, not a private one. The cash would flow through public funds and long-term government bonds.
The money would fund data centers across the country, according to a Bloomberg report. State giants China Mobile and China Telecom would run most of them.
The goal is to link them into one network by 2028. The plan also reaches past computing power, since China wants to fold in power grid upgrades.
Add those in, and the bill could climb past 5 trillion yuan. Private spending by firms like Alibaba and Tencent sits on top of that.
The plan is part of a bigger push called the "Six Networks" program. China laid it out earlier this year, and it builds on a five-year plan that runs through 2030.
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The Part That Hits U.S. Chipmakers
Here's the catch that stings Wall Street. At least 80% of the tech, chips included, would have to come from Chinese suppliers like Huawei.
That leaves little room for Nvidia and AMD. The two firms rule the AI chip market most everywhere else.
It's a bit like a country paving every road with only its own steel. It costs more, but it stays fully in local hands.
Why go this route? Beijing wants control over the gear that powers its AI, even if the price runs higher.
The move fits a clear pattern, since Beijing has told AI firms to get state approval before taking U.S. money. It also reportedly ordered new state-funded data centers to use only Chinese-made chips.
Just last month, a Chinese agency went further, clearing nine homegrown chip designs for wider use. The designs came from Huawei and a few smaller local chipmakers.
The aim is plain. China wants a full home-grown stack that doesn't lean on U.S. chips.
For U.S. chipmakers, that's the worry in one line. The world's second-biggest market is building a wall.
What To Watch
The number sounds huge until you stack it against the U.S., where Meta and Microsoft alone plan to spend more than $700 billion on AI this year. China's whole five-year public plan comes in at less than half of that.
In other words, two U.S. firms plan to outspend a whole nation. That gap shows how big the U.S. AI bet has grown.
So the race isn't really about who spends more. It's about who builds their AI on whose chips, and China just made its answer clear.
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