Business
Alibaba Boosts AI Spending as It Unveils Most Powerful Model Yet
Alibaba’s shares jumped nearly 9 percent in Hong Kong on Wednesday after Chief Executive Officer Eddie Wu announced plans to raise the company’s budget for artificial intelligence, underscoring the intensifying race among global tech giants to dominate the fast-evolving sector.
The e-commerce group has already committed 380 billion yuan (€45 billion) over the next three years to strengthen its AI infrastructure, including data centers and cloud capabilities. Wu did not disclose how much additional funding would be allocated but stressed that investment levels needed to rise as demand for computing power and AI applications continues to accelerate.
Wu made the remarks at Alibaba’s annual conference in Hangzhou, where the company unveiled its most advanced AI model to date. The new system, called Qwen3-Max, contains more than one trillion parameters — the learned values that guide how the technology interprets data and generates outputs.
Chief Technology Officer Zhou Jingren said Qwen3-Max represents the company’s largest and most ambitious release so far, aiming to match or surpass rivals in China and overseas. Alibaba claimed that on several independent benchmarks, Qwen3-Max outperformed models such as Anthropic’s Claude and DeepSeek-V3.1, though analysts noted that competition remains fierce.
“The industry’s development speed far exceeded what we expected, and the industry’s demand for AI infrastructure also far exceeded our anticipation,” Wu told the conference. “We are actively proceeding with the 380 billion investment in AI infrastructure, and plan to add more.” He estimated that global investment in artificial intelligence could exceed $4 trillion (€3.4 trillion) within the next five years.
Chinese technology companies including Tencent and JD.com, along with US giants such as Microsoft, Google, and Amazon, have been stepping up their AI investments in recent months, reflecting both the commercial potential of the technology and the geopolitical competition surrounding it.
However, Alibaba’s expansion comes at a challenging moment for China’s tech sector. Access to high-performance processors, crucial for training and running advanced AI systems, has been restricted by US trade controls. According to the Financial Times, Chinese regulators last week prohibited major domestic firms from purchasing Nvidia’s most advanced AI chips.
Beijing has encouraged local firms to develop homegrown alternatives, aiming to reduce reliance on US suppliers. In August, officials reportedly advised companies against buying Nvidia’s H20 processor, a chip designed specifically for the Chinese market, citing data security concerns. The guidance followed the US government’s earlier decision to ban exports of H20 chips to China, a restriction that was lifted in April as part of ongoing trade negotiations.
Despite these hurdles, Alibaba is pushing ahead with what it sees as a critical growth driver for its cloud and e-commerce businesses. With Qwen3-Max, the company hopes to reinforce its position in a crowded global AI race while navigating regulatory and supply chain pressures at home and abroad.
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