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Alibaba leverages cloud business to become a leading AI investor in China

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Alibaba has been leveraging its vast cloud computing infrastructure to become a leading investor in China’s generative artificial intelligence start-ups, offering them credits to use the scarce network resources needed to train models rather than conventional cash-for-equity funding.

The Chinese ecommerce giant is trying to replicate the success of Microsoft’s investment in the US leader, OpenAI, by taking stakes in prominent start-ups Moonshot, Zhipu, MiniMax and 01.ai. They have all been developing local versions of US applications such as OpenAI’s ChatGPT and Character.ai’s avatar chatbot.

SUQIAN, CHINA - MARCH 23, 2024 - Illustration Kimi, Suqian, Jiangsu Province, China, March 23, 2024. On March 18, the Kimi intelligent assistant launched by Moonshot AI, a Chinese domestic artificial intelligence startup, has supported 2 million words of ultra-long lossless context, and will open the product private test from today. (Photo credit should read CFOTO/Future Publishing via Getty Images)
The Kimi intelligent assistant launched by Moonshot AI in March. (CFOTO/Future Publishing via Getty Images) · Costfoto via Getty Images

In one example, Alibaba led a $1bn fundraising round in Moonshot AI that valued the start-up at $2.5bn in February. It put $800mn into the developer of the fast-growing Kimi AI chatbot, with just under half coming in the form of cloud computing credits, according to two people familiar with the deal. Alibaba declined to comment.

Over the past year, Alibaba chief executive Eddie Yongming Wu has personally overseen investments in the four leading AI start-ups, according to people familiar with the matter, as the company seeks to reinvent itself as an AI innovator.

The splurge in investment comes at a pivotal time for Alibaba. It is trying to chart a new path as it grapples with rising competition from ByteDance and PDD Holdings in its core ecommerce market and after the chaotic unwinding of its ambitious restructuring plan, under which its cloud business was supposed to pursue an initial public offering.

Alibaba cancelled that plan in November, citing the impact of US chip restrictions. Wu then took direct control of the cloud business, pledging to invest in AI and putting the business at the centre of his strategy to boost growth.

“Providing compute is actually more valuable than cash.”Chinese AI scientist

The cloud arm had been averaging single-digit quarterly growth since 2022, following Beijing’s crackdown on large internet companies. Its profitability has lagged far behind that of US rivals such as AWS.

Charlie Dai, vice-president and principal analyst at tech consultancy Forrester, said Alibaba was “facilitating the start-ups by offering a public cloud platform with comprehensive capabilities boosted by its broad ecosystem for their open-source models” while generating new revenue for its cloud business by providing computing resources to train their models.

The structure of Alibaba’s investment in Moonshot echoes those of Microsoft and Amazon, under which cash is transferred to AI start-ups on the agreement that they will use the money to train and run models on Azure and AWS servers, respectively.