Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. is taking steps to list its AI chipmaking arm T-Head. The move comes as investor appetite grows for companies building alternatives to Nvidia in the AI chip space.
Alibaba Group Holding Limited, BABA
The first phase involves restructuring T-Head with partial employee ownership. After that, the company will pursue an initial public offering. No timeline has been set for the listing.
Alibaba’s U.S.-traded shares gained 4.6% in premarket activity following the report. The company has not commented on the plans.
Founded in 2018, T-Head operates as Alibaba’s wholly owned semiconductor division. The unit designs processors spanning data center chips, AI accelerators, and Internet-of-Things components.
Details about T-Head’s potential valuation remain unclear. The company is still in early planning stages. However, similar IPOs from Chinese chipmakers like Moore Threads Technology have attracted strong investor backing.
This reflects growing confidence that Beijing will support domestic chip companies. Chinese firms are developing alternatives to American technology as U.S. export restrictions limit access to advanced chips.
T-Head is making headway in winning customers. The division recently landed a deal with China’s No. 2 wireless carrier for its Pingtouge AI accelerators.
These chips will power the carrier’s new data center in northwestern China. They’ll work alongside processors from MetaX Integrated Circuits and Biren Technology.
Alibaba has invested heavily in chip design to fuel its data centers and cloud infrastructure. The AI chip effort is part of a larger strategy to compete with OpenAI and other AI leaders.
CEO Eddie Wu has committed over $53 billion to infrastructure and AI projects. He’s indicated the company may exceed that investment over time.
The company upgraded its Qwen mobile app in November, marking a major push into consumer AI. In January, Qwen was linked to Alibaba’s e-commerce and travel platforms.
This integration represents the company’s most ambitious attempt to create an all-in-one AI assistant for consumers. The goal is to tie together services across the Alibaba ecosystem.
Alibaba’s chip development mirrors projects at other Chinese tech giants like Baidu. These companies are building their own AI silicon as advanced Nvidia chips remain unavailable due to export bans.
Nvidia’s AI accelerators are the industry standard for training sophisticated models from companies like OpenAI and Anthropic. Chinese firms are racing to close the technology gap.
The employee ownership structure before the IPO could help T-Head attract top engineering talent. This approach is common among Chinese tech companies preparing for public listings.
T-Head designs processors across the complete chip stack from high-performance data center silicon to specialized Internet-of-Things chips for connected devices.
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