Singapore authorities are investigating a fraud case involving servers from Dell (DELL, Financials) and Super Micro Computer (SMCI, Financials) that were shipped to Malaysia, raising concerns about potential violations of U.S. export controls.
According to Singapore's law minister, K. Shanmugam, the inquiry tracks the arrest of three people on charges connected to the alleged fraud involving the misrepresenting of the servers' eventual destination. Whether Malaysia was the planned ultimate destination or whether the servers were subsequently redirected elsewhere is still unknown.
The matter has attracted notice since the servers include potentially Nvidia (NVDA, Financials) processors. To stop powerful artificial intelligence chipsincluding those made by Nvidiafrom being sent to China, the United States has placed export limitations on them.
Initiated by an anonymous tip-off, Shanmugam claimed, no foreign authority asked for the probe. To clear things, Singapore has asked U.S. and Malaysian officials for further information.
The lawsuit fits under a larger issue about Chinese businesses reportedly buying Nvidia's chips via middlemen, therefore avoiding U.S. export restrictions. Chinese artificial intelligence business DeepSeek is under U.S. investigation for possibly purchasing limited Nvidia processors via companies situated in Singapore.
Chinese technological behemoths Alibaba (BABA, Financials), Tencent (TCEHY, Financials), and ByteDance (BDNCE) are aggressively buying Nvidia's H20 chip, which is still accessible under present U.S. export rules but may have future limits.
Nvidia said it will look into claims of illegal chip diversions to limited purchasers.
This article first appeared on GuruFocus.免责声明:投资有风险,本文并非投资建议,以上内容不应被视为任何金融产品的购买或出售要约、建议或邀请,作者或其他用户的任何相关讨论、评论或帖子也不应被视为此类内容。本文仅供一般参考,不考虑您的个人投资目标、财务状况或需求。TTM对信息的准确性和完整性不承担任何责任或保证,投资者应自行研究并在投资前寻求专业建议。