SNCF seem to have decided that, drawing on their decades of experience and recent research and tests, 320km/h is the optimal speed for the journey lengths they're undertaking, when considering the cost of energy and maintenance against the revenues from faster journey times.
HS2 services will generally be on shorter journeys than long-distance TGVs currently make. I would suggest that aiming for a maximum commercial speed of more than 320 km/h was probably always unnecessary. The likelihood of the 360 target being cut seems fairly high to me.
I think a speed of lower than the existing 300km/h would be disappointing, though.
The Germans have decided that it's more efficient to build cheaper infrastructure on many routes, and crucially now with the ICE4 a cheaper train, that caps out at 250km/h, and accept that journey times will not be as competitive against the airlines as they are in France or Japan. This seems to work for them though, as they can sell themselves on comfort, environmental credentials and the new bargain Super Sparpreis fares. In this country, long-distance rail franchises do not seem even slightly interested in attracting passengers based on any of those 3 points, at least to me.