The Commerce Department has flagged more than 100 Chinese companies as national security risks, including DeepSeek - the AI startup that wiped hundreds of billions off U.S. tech stocks in early 2025.
So far, none of those firms have actually been blacklisted.
How The Entity List Works
The Commerce Department's job is to police which foreign companies can buy American technology, with the Entity List as its main tool. The list is a federal blacklist that blocks U.S. suppliers from selling to flagged firms without a special license.
Getting added to it can effectively cut a company off from advanced chips, design software, and manufacturing equipment overnight. According to Reuters, more than 100 Chinese firms have already been approved by an interagency committee for the list, with DeepSeek and memory chipmaker CXMT among the most notable names.
The Hangzhou-based startup made global news in January 2025 when its low-cost AI model knocked roughly $589 billion off Nvidia's market cap in a single day - the biggest one-day loss in stock market history. The selloff rattled the entire AI trade, with U.S. investors questioning whether American chipmakers could keep their lead over Chinese rivals.
The interagency approval is finished and the names are locked in, leaving only the formal designation that would actually trigger the export restrictions.
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Why Washington Is Holding Back
The delay traces back to the Trump administration's effort to avoid escalating tensions with Beijing, with tariffs, rare earth export controls, and access to U.S. technology all on the table. Beijing's dominance in rare earth processing gives it real leverage in any tech standoff with Washington, which makes dropping 100+ Chinese firms on the blacklist mid-conversation a likely deal-breaker.
DeepSeek complicates the picture further. A senior U.S. State Department official told Reuters that the startup tried to use Southeast Asian shell companies to illegally access advanced U.S. chips, meaning a public blacklisting would force a conversation about export controls that aren't working as intended.
Holding the list back keeps the pressure quiet and the leverage intact, while also keeping American chipmakers like Nvidia and AMD out of the immediate crossfire. Both companies still earn a meaningful slice of revenue from Chinese customers, and any escalation could pull guidance lower [NEEDS MANUAL VERIFICATION - timing reference "into 2026" appears stale given current date].
What To Watch
The list hasn't been canceled - it's parked, ready to deploy if trade talks stall or break down. Investors with exposure to U.S. semiconductor and AI hardware names should treat this as a slow-moving headline risk, where 100+ names can drop in a single move.
The setup also matters for the broader AI trade, since a meaningful share of those firms losing U.S. chip access could shift demand for Nvidia and AMD hardware while Chinese rivals like Huawei and SMIC pick up market share at home.
Reuters reported the Commerce Department's Bureau of Industry and Security did not directly respond to questions about why updates to the Entity List had not been published since last year, leaving the decision tied to whatever happens at the negotiating table.
For now, both sides are waiting on the same trade talks.
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