ALIBABA Group Holding’s stock surged as much as 8.6 per cent after the Information reported that Apple is working with the e-commerce pioneer to roll out artificial intelligence (AI) features in China.
The stock climbed its most since September after the tech outlet, citing one unidentified source, said Apple and Alibaba have submitted AI features for approval to China’s cyberspace regulator. Baidu, long considered a rival candidate, slid almost 3 per cent in Hong Kong.
Securing AI real estate on the iPhone would mark a breakthrough for Alibaba, whose latest models performed well in global benchmarks. Its stock is up more than 30 per cent in 2025, buoyed by optimism that the company – which is struggling with flagging Chinese consumption – is making headway in efforts to develop AI services and platforms for the world’s biggest Internet arena. Representatives for Alibaba and Baidu did not respond to requests for comment.
Alibaba could present a strong local partner to Apple, which on its part is fighting to revive sales in the country as rivals such as Huawei Technologies move ahead with AI-enabled smartphones.
“Alibaba is the largest e-commerce player in China and therefore should have a treasure trove of data that Apple could look to leverage in delivering personalised GenAI features to Chinese consumer,” Morgan Stanley analyst Erik Woodring wrote. “We could also see a scenario where Apple creates an initial AI partnership with Alibaba that eventually expands to other local Chinese cloud players over time.”
The iPhone maker has not yet unveiled a longer-term partner for its AI offerings in China, after signing a landmark deal with OpenAI to integrate ChatGPT into iPhones.
Apple Intelligence does not currently work for iPhones bought in mainland China, where OpenAI has taken steps to block access. Regulators there require companies to obtain approval before they roll out generative AI services in the country, and so far no major US service has managed to win a nod from Beijing.
In January, Alibaba published benchmark scores showing its Qwen 2.5 Max edition scored better than Meta Platforms’s Llama and DeepSeek’s V3 model in various tests. The company is now considered a leading player in AI alongside big names from Tencent Holdings to ByteDance and startups including Minimax and Zhipu. BLOOMBERG
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