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Nvidia, TSMC, Tesla, Aramco and Greggs

The shares on Nvidia (NVDA) were 8.7% on the lowest closing price since last September, since the chips of the Tech giant reached artificial intelligence (AI) despite export controls China.

The Wall Street Journal reported on Sunday that the Blackwell chips from NVIDIA (NVDA) reached China by return sellers from third-party providers who were registered in the nearby regions in violation of export controls.

This report followed the news that Singapore examines the customers of Nvidia, Dell (Dell) and Super Micro Computer (SMCI), companies that produce servers with Blackwell -GPUS (graphic processing units) -for potential violation of US export restrictions in shipping servers that can contain NVIDIA (NVDA) chips from Singapore from Malaysia. The authorities examine whether the servers then came to other countries.

Read more: FTSE 100 LIVE: Shares pull lower, while the US tariffs for China, Canada and Mexico occur

“Anonymous dealers cannot acquire, deliver, install, use and maintain in non -authorized countries in non -authorized countries,” said a spokesman for Nvidia (NVDA) in a statement to Yahoo Finance. “We will continue to examine every report on a possible distraction and take appropriate measures.”

The shares in Nvidia (NVDA) had also decreased under concerns about the effects of trade tariffs, since US President Donald Trump confirmed that the tasks for Mexico and Canada would come into force on Tuesday.

Deren Nathan, head of equity research at Hargreaves Lansdown (HL.L), said that the fall in Nvidia (NVDA) is “due to fears of further export restrictions for areas including China.

Nasdaqgs – delayed quote USD

At the end: March 3 at 4:00 p.m. GMT-5

The stocks listed in Taiwan to TSMC (2330.TW) had dropped by 2% on Tuesday after the chip maker announced that it would invest $ 100 billion in the USA.

Trump made the announcement in a press conference in the White House on Monday together with the CC Wei -ceo from TSMC.

Read more: Oil drops deep to 3 months when Trump tariffs trigger fears before the global trade war

In a declaration published on Tuesday, TSMC announced that the expansion of its investments in the United States comprises plans for three new manufacturing facilities, two advanced packaging facilities and a large research and development team center.

The chipmaker said that this would support 40,000 construction work in the next four years and to create tens of thousands of jobs in production, research and development of chips and development.