Global investors are increasingly turning to Chinese AI companies as worries grow that parts of Wall Street’s technology boom may be overheating. Many fund managers now see China as a place to spread risk, rather than rely only on expensive US tech stocks.
Beijing’s drive for technology independence, particularly with regard to AI and chips, is helping many firms transition to public markets. This has allowed the Hong Kong Exchange to significantly ramp up the pace of going public.
Not only are large numbers of firms now reaching the public market, but they are also reaching it with the benefit of significant media attention, a number of them being Moore Threads and MetaX.
Foreign investors believe that because of increased government support, China is closing the technology gap with the United States. On the contrary, many investors have expressed concerns about the high price valuations of AI stocks traded in the US and the possible lower return on investment than expected.
As a result, many asset managers are changing their asset allocation strategies. For example, a UK-based asset management firm is reducing its exposure to large US technology firms and establishing investment positions in Chinese companies such as Alibaba to access the growth of AI in China.
The growth trend is also driven significantly by large Chinese technology firms. Alibaba and Baidu are making heavy investments in chips, data centers, and AI models. They are also monetizing their operations with their cloud through the sale of these products.
Interest has also surged as a wave of Chinese AI startups list in Shanghai and Hong Kong. Their rise has followed the global attention around DeepSeek, a Chinese chatbot often compared to ChatGPT.
“While the US remains the leader in frontier AI, China is rapidly narrowing the gap,” said Gemma Cairns-Smith, Investment Specialist at Ruffer, noting that competition is becoming tougher than many expected.
More recently, new types of exchange-traded funds have made it relatively easy for investors worldwide to access Chinese investments similar to what companies like Google, Meta, and Tesla represent in the West.
According to one ETF manager, “The speed at which these technology companies are able to develop and deploy their products, as a result of the urgency created by this race to compete for technology, is the principal force behind their recent successes resulting from the increased demand for chips and AI based technologies.”
Major financial investments are now following this trend, with funds that focus on Chinese technology and internet companies experiencing significant growth this year as sentiment toward China tech has returned to a previously strong level from earlier this decade.
Some funds creating these companies believe China’s strengths are not necessarily focused on developing and creating original breakthrough technology, but rather on sustaining development at an extremely rapid pace.
Retail investors inside China are also adding fuel to the rally. As Cryptopolitan reported, massive demand for chip IPOs has seen companies like MetaX and Onmicro oversubscribed thousands of times, reflecting strong domestic enthusiasm alongside rising trade surpluses.
Overall, Chinese AI is becoming harder for global investors to ignore. While risks remain, many see it as a useful hedge in an uncertain, geopolitics-driven tech landscape.
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