HONG KONG/NEW YORK, Dec 23 (Reuters) – Global investors are increasing their wagers on Chinese artificial intelligence companies, betting on the next DeepSeek and seeking to diversify, with concerns growing about a speculative bubble in the sector on Wall Street.
Demand for China’s AI companies is also being stimulated by Beijing’s push for tech independence. China has fast-tracked blockbuster listings of chipmakers, notably Moore Threads (688795.SS), dubbed “China’s Nvidia“, and MetaX (688802.SS), which both debuted this month.
Foreigners see China closing the tech gap with the U.S. as Beijing steps up support for AI chipmakers, spurring bets on Chinese companies just as worries grow over lofty valuations on U.S.-listed AI stocks.
U.K.-based asset manager Ruffer, for example, said it has “deliberately limited exposure” to the Magnificent Seven – the U.S. tech giants – and is looking to add positions in Alibaba (BABA, 9988.HK) for a bigger exposure to China’s AI theme.
“While the U.S. remains the leader in frontier AI, China is rapidly narrowing the gap,” said Gemma Cairns-Smith, Investment Specialist at Ruffer. “The moat may not be as wide, or as deep, as many think … The competitive landscape is shifting.”
Quark AI glasses from Alibaba at a store in Shanghai. (CFOTO/Future Publishing via Getty Images) · CFOTO via Getty Images
Ruffer is gaining exposure to the AI theme through Chinese tech giants such as Alibaba, which operates an AI chip unit, owns large language model Qwen, and is ploughing money into cloud infrastructure.
Global asset managers are increasingly eyeing Chinese AI firms as a wave of startups lists on the mainland and in Hong Kong, seeking to tap into surging investor appetite following the meteoric rise of DeepSeek, China’s answer to ChatGPT.
TECH WAR SPURS DEMAND
UBS Global Wealth Management in a report this month rated China tech as “most attractive”, citing investors’ search for geographical diversification and China’s “strong policy backing, technological self-reliance, and rapid AI monetization”.
The tech-heavy Nasdaq (^IXIC) currently trades at 31 times earnings, compared with a multiple of 24 for Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Tech (HSTECH.HK), which enables AI bets via stocks including Alibaba (BABA, 9988.HK), Baidu (BIDU, 9888.HK), Tencent (0700.HK, TCEHY) and chip foundry SMIC (0981.HK).
Riding the momentum, U.S. investment adviser Rayliant helped launch a Nasdaq-listed fund in September that gives investors access to “China’s versions of stocks like Google, Meta, Tesla, Apple, and OpenAI”.
KraneShares Chief Investment Officer Brendan Ahern said the rapid ascent of Chinese AI chipmakers such as Cambricon speaks to the scale and speed of innovation across China’s AI and semiconductor industries.
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