South China Morning Post

INVESTORS BET ON ‘FOUR NEWA.I. TIGERS OF CHINA’

Baichuan joins Zhipu AI, Moonshot AI and MiniMax in the club of unicorns with a focus on ChatGPT-like services after completing fundraisin­g round

- Ben Jiang ben.jiang@scmp.com

A group of artificial intelligen­ce (AI) start-ups are emerging as China’s best hopes for reaching the frontier of ChatGPT-like technology, as they draw increasing attention from users and investors.

Among them, Baichuan is the latest to complete a new round of fundraisin­g. While the start-up told the Post yesterday there had been some “discrepanc­ies” in local reporting about the amount raised, several outlets estimated its latest valuation at about US$1.8 billion.

That puts the Beijing-based company in a league of domestic AI unicorns – start-ups valued at more than US$1 billion – that also includes Zhipu AI, Moonshot AI, and MiniMax.

These firms have been dubbed locally as the “four new AI tigers of China”, in contrast to the four “old” AI dragons – SenseTime, Megvii, CloudWalk Technology, and Yitu Technology – which focused mostly on facial and image recognitio­n technologi­es.

Since Microsoft-backed startup OpenAI debuted ChatGPT in late 2022, Chinese big tech firms and start-ups alike have been racing to draw users to their generative AI services, which are capable of creating content such as text, images, videos, and audio.

About 200 large language models (LLMs) – the technology underpinni­ng generative AI services – have been launched in China so far, according to government figures.

Baichuan was founded a year ago by Wang Xiaochuan, founder of Sogou, once the largest rival to Chinese internet search giant Baidu before being sold to social media and video gaming giant Tencent Holdings.

The venture, which develops its own LLMs, is led by a team that includes Wang’s long-time aide and former Sogou chief operating officer, Ru Liyun.

To date, Baichuan has released three versions of its eponymous AI models, the latest of which the company said had surpassed OpenAI’s most advanced GPT4 model in Chinese language capability, citing multiple benchmark tests.

The firm announced last October it raised US$300 million from backers including Tencent, smartphone maker Xiaomi, and e-commerce giant Alibaba Group Holding, which owns the Post.

In that same month, Zhipu AI, also based in Beijing, said it had raised 2.5 billion yuan (HK$2.7 billion) since the beginning of last year from state-affiliated investors, Alibaba, Tencent, food delivery platform operator Meituan, as well as venture investors including GL Ventures and HongShan.

By that point, it was valued at more than US$1.3 billion.

Zhipu AI was founded in 2019 to build on research from the Knowledge Engineerin­g Group of Tsinghua University. The startup’s chief executive, Zhang Peng, graduated with a doctorate from Tsinghua’s computer science department.

The two other new tigers – Moonshot AI and MiniMax, founded in 2023 and 2021, respective­ly – both saw their recent valuation rise to roughly US$2.5 billion.

Moonshot AI, another start-up based in Beijing, raised US$1 billion in a funding round in February, according to multiple Chinese media reports. Its flagship Kimi chatbot, built on its self-developed LLM and upgraded last month, can process 2 million Chinese characters in a single prompt.

MiniMax, based in Shanghai, is looking to raise at least US$600 million in a new round led by Alibaba that would value the company at more than US$2.5 billion, according to a report by Bloomberg last month.

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