The share price of Nvidia has not endured immense negative pressure. It was the Trump administration that pulled out a whole suite of regulations that would limit the sales of the AI-capable semiconductors globally, which gave the predominant chip maker a timely edge due to the rising demand.
The Shelved Threat
The United States Department of Commerce filed a draft regulation, indicating Nvidia and AMD and similar companies, requiring them to obtain permission from the government to export AI-enabled semiconductor products throughout the world.
The proposal was first reported by Bloomberg at the beginning of this month; in event of its implementation, allied countries should have been required to approve the sale which would have been a hindrance to worldly revenues.
After a speedy interagency consultation, the Office of Management and Budget revealed that the proposal was withdrawn; no further data was disclosed, and one of the authorities connected with the Trump administration described the creation as preliminary dialogue.
The stakes are also noted in the filings at Nvidia: the international sales are the source of most of its business, and restrictions would probably damage its financial situation.
The stocks of the company finished on the 17th of March, 2026, at the price of $183.27, which fell by 0.0% of the previous trading range between $181.68 and $185.05 and the company had a market capitalization of about $4.5 trillion.
Revenue Powerhouse
Revenue for the quarter ending January 25, 2026, was $68.1 billion, up 20% from the previous quarter and 73% from the same period the year before.
Diluted earnings per share were $1.76, up from $0.89 the previous year, while net income under generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP) increased to $42.96 billion, up 94% year over year.
These are mostly AI-led sales, which shows that there is susceptibility to export limitation; any international hindrances may have significant financial consequences.
Bright Road Ahead
The turnaround of the policy reflects a realistic reversal of the Trump government that has fewer regulations to facilitate U.S. dominance in AI without arresting innovation. However, there are still issues of geopolitical risks especially with China and continued questions by its allies.
The competitive edge that Nvidia has in AI compute seems strong, and the company will be in a position to stay connected with the further demand of hyperscaler cloud providers.
Those investors who have entrusted their faith in the capacity of the company to expand internationally are thus rewarded, though caution over future policy changes is also crucial, since any free-trade policy success today would bear an impact on the level of technological excellence in the future.
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