President Donald Trump dismissed reports thatNvidia CEO Jensen Huanghad been left off his Beijing delegation as 'FAKE NEWS' on Tuesday evening, writing on Truth Social that 'CNBC incorrectly reported that the Great Jensen Huang, of Nvidia, was not invited to the incredible gathering of the World's Greatest Businessmen/women proudly going to China.'

His own White House told a different story. A spokesman confirmed to Reuters that Huang's 'schedule had changed' and that it had 'worked out for him to attend.' Bloomberg separately confirmed that 'the list of attendees until Tuesday had not included Huang.'

What multiple sources describe is this: Trump, after seeing coverage of Huang's absence, personally telephoned the Nvidia chief on Tuesday and asked him to come, Euronews confirmed. The president made the decision himself, overriding concerns from staff who had cautioned that Huang's presence could become a political liability.

Huang, whose net worthForbesestimates at roughly $180 billion (£142 billion), flew from California to Alaska to board Air Force One during a refuelling stop at Ted Stevens Airport in Anchorage. He was later photographed stepping off the aircraft in Beijing alongsideTesla CEO Elon Musk and Apple CEO Tim Cook.

'Jensen is attending the summit at the invitation of President Trump to support America and the administration's goals,' an Nvidia spokesperson told Euronews.

In his Truth Social post, Trump said Huang was 'currently on Air Force One' and listed the full delegation: Musk, Cook, Larry Fink of BlackRock, Stephen Schwarzman of Blackstone, Kelly Ortberg of Boeing, Brian Sikes of Cargill, Jane Fraser of Citi, Larry Culp of GE Aerospace, David Solomon of Goldman Sachs, Sanjay Mehrotra of Micron, and Cristiano Amon of Qualcomm.

Trump added that he would be 'asking President Xi, a Leader of extraordinary distinction, to "open up" China so that these brilliant people can work their magic.' He called it his 'very first request' upon arrival.

The exclusion, before Trump's reversal, had not come from nowhere. Huang and the president had previously discussed how the Nvidia CEO's presence in Beijing could invite uncomfortable scrutiny of the administration's semiconductor policies toward China. Republican hawks in Congress have sharply criticised the White House for allowing Nvidia to sell more advanced chips to Chinese buyers, and a House committee recently advanced legislation giving lawmakers 30 days to review and block such sales.

Huang had kept the door open publicly. Speaking to CNBC's Jim Cramer last week, he said, 'If invited, it would be a privilege, it would be a great honor to represent the United States.'

The financial stakes are enormous. Huang has publicly valued China's addressable market for AI chips at $50 billion (£39.5 billion) over the next few years and, as recently as October, described the long-term opportunity as worth 'a couple of hundred billion dollars by the end of the decade.' The China market once accounted for 13% of Nvidia's total revenue, a share that has collapsed under the weight of US export restrictions.

Source: International Business Times UK