China's Biren Seeks US$900 Million to Challenge Nvidia's GPU Dominance

Biren Technology is raising US$900 million to scale production of its next-generation GPUs, directly challenging Nvidia's hold on China's AI chip market. The move comes as U.S. export restrictions force Chinese cloud providers to seek domestic alternatives.

By Inside AI Editorial Team July 6, 2026
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July 6, 2026, (Inside AI) — Shanghai Biren Technology, China's champion in artificial intelligence chips, is raising HK$7 billion (US$900 million) to ramp up GPU production. The move targets Nvidia's dominant market share inside China, capitalizing on a global AI boom.

Biren disclosed the fundraising in a regulatory filing. It plans to use 60 per cent of the fresh capital for commercialisation and mass production of its next-generation general-purpose GPUs. The company said cloud providers, AI data centres, and enterprises are rapidly expanding AI computing deployments.

"Customers such as cloud service providers, AI data centres and enterprise customers are substantially expanding their AI computing deployments," the company stated.

Biren's stock initially rose nearly 1 per cent before dropping 2.5 per cent on Monday morning. Since its IPO, the stock has surged over 150 per cent, reflecting investor confidence in China's domestic chip push.

The Siege on Nvidia's Walled Garden

Biren's capital raise is not just about scaling production. It is a strategic thrust in China's broader campaign to build a self-reliant AI chip ecosystem. Nvidia currently holds over 90 per cent of China's AI chip market, but U.S. export controls have throttled its ability to sell advanced GPUs there.

Washington's October 2023 rules banned exports of Nvidia's A100 and H100 chips. Later restrictions even targeted lower-performance chips like the A800 and H800, which Nvidia designed specifically for China. This opened a gap that domestic players like Biren, Huawei, and Cambricon are racing to fill.

Biren's BR100 GPU, launched in 2022, was once touted as rivaling Nvidia's A100. But U.S. sanctions forced the company to redesign its chips. Its latest BR106 series reportedly uses a chiplet architecture to bypass manufacturing restrictions, according to industry analysts.

The company's filing underscored urgency: "Facing robust customers' demand, the company takes the view that it is essential to maintain adequate capital to ramp up the production of the company's next-generation [general purpose] GPU solutions in order to ensure timely fulfilment of orders."

China's AI data centre buildout is staggering. The country plans to add 50 gigawatts of data centre capacity by 2030, requiring millions of GPUs. This demand is forcing local chipmakers to scale faster than ever.

The Foundry Bottleneck and a Fragile Supply Chain

Biren's production push faces a critical choke point: advanced chip manufacturing. U.S. sanctions block Chinese firms from accessing TSMC's leading-edge nodes. Biren relies on SMIC, China's top foundry, which can only produce 7nm chips—far behind TSMC's 3nm.

This manufacturing gap forces Biren to use creative chiplet designs to boost performance. But yields at SMIC remain lower, and capacity is limited. Industry sources say SMIC's 7nm output is fully booked, with priority given to Huawei.

Biren's fundraising may partly go toward securing wafer allocation. Some analysts believe the company is also exploring advanced packaging techniques to integrate multiple chiplets, compensating for node disadvantages.

Competing viewpoints highlight the risks. Dr. Wei Chen, a semiconductor analyst at Beijing's CCID Consulting, noted: "Biren's technology is promising, but without access to cutting-edge manufacturing, it will struggle to match Nvidia's price-performance ratio. The next two years are critical."

Meanwhile, Huawei's Ascend 910B GPU is already in mass production and widely adopted by Chinese cloud giants. Biren must prove it can deliver at scale, not just in benchmarks.

The market is watching closely. Biren's US$900 million raise is one of the largest by a Chinese AI chip firm this year. Success could cement its position as a credible Nvidia alternative. Failure would leave the door open for rivals in a market that cannot afford delays.

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