EV Maker NIO Cuts Reliance on Nvidia with In-House Chips
By Reuters | 24 Apr, 2026
CEO William Lee think the Chinese EV pioneer can make better and cheaper EVs with custom chips that will cost less in the long run than high-margin Nvidia automotive chips.
William Li, CEO of Chinese EV maker NIO, speaks to journalists next to the company’s newly presented ES9 electric SUV model at the Beijing International Automotive Exhibition (Auto China), in Beijing, China, April 24, 2026. REUTERS/Maxim Shemetov
NIO is betting that in-house chip development will sharpen its technological edge and improve profitability, Chief Executive William Li said on Friday, as the Chinese premium EV brand pushes to reduce reliance on suppliers such as Nvidia.
Li said NIO developed its own silicon so its chips could better match the company's algorithms and sensor layout, particularly for AI functions such as advanced driver-assistance.
He told Reuters in an interview that Nvidia's automotive chips have "very high gross margin," and that by making its own chips NIO could eventually lift its overall profit, despite higher upfront research-and-development costs.
Nio has spun off its chip unit, Shenji, into an independent company, which Li said is open to supplying chips to external customers.
Li said NIO's nanometer-scale automotive-grade chips and whole-vehicle operating system would be central to its long-term global competitiveness.
The rise of China's electric vehicle makers presents a "significant opportunity" to redefine the high-end and luxury car market, Li added, opening doors for NIO to become a global premium marque.
(Reporting by Ju-min Park, Zhang Yan and Qiaoyi Li; Editing by David Dolan, Kirsten Donovan)
Recent Articles
- Anthropic Allowed to Release Mythos AI Model to 'Tusted' US Organizations
- Apple Seeks Approval to Buy from Blacklisted Chinese Company to Ease Memory Crunch
- China's Industrial Profits Stay Resilient on Factories, Exports
- Meet the Teen Who Undertook a 7-Continent Solo Flight Against Cancer
- Getting Fit Pt. 2 - Raising Our Floor
- South Korea Survives World Cup Scare, Advances to Round of 32
- SpaceX Targets US Consumers with Starlink Mobile Service Push
- Former First Lady Kim Keon Hee Gets 7-Year Jail Term for Bribery
- Iran Reasserts Right to Control Hormuz Passage After Ship Hit Near Oman
- Trump's Cutoff of Clean Energy Tax Credit Drives Rush of New Projects Before Costs Soar
