The National - News

VCs GET BEHIND AI AS CHINA AMBITIONS GROW

Innovation Ventures enterprise on a mission to sell artificial intelligen­ce to local businesses and transform the landscape of the financial industry

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For years, Kai-Fu Lee would share his venture capital firm’s office space in Beijing with start-ups he was backing so they could get advice and collaborat­e with each other. But about three months ago, the last of the start-ups packed up and moved out. The desks were promptly taken over by employees of Sinovation Ventures’ latest growing endeavour, an in-house AI Institute.

“It makes more sense to have our AI [artificial intelligen­ce] team together in the office – there’s more synergy,” says Mr Lee, a veteran of both Google and Microsoft in China, during an interview at his headquarte­rs in the city’s Haidian District.

The AI Institute now has about 30 full-time employees with plans to grow headcount to about 100 within the year.

China’s government has declared its ambition to lead the world in artificial intelligen­ce by 2030. That ambition, set forth in a state plan issued in July, creates a hospitable environmen­t for AI entreprene­urs and investors.

Mr Lee’s first aim is not world domination, but more pragmatic. About 80 per cent of his shop’s funding and attention is now focused on achieving practical business efficienci­es, with the other 20 per cent lavished on potentiall­y more disruptive if speculativ­e AI-related technologi­es.

While flashy AI-related projects like driverless cars tend to grab the most headlines, Mr Lee says he is first focused on “the low-hanging fruit” of improving the back ends of many business and industrial operations.

The trick is convincing China’s lumbering state-run industrial giants, not typically regarded as being on the leading technology edge, that their operations can benefit significan­tly from AI.

“We’re first taking what’s known, what’s been proven in the academic research, and applying it to areas where huge amounts of data exist and are accurately and objectivel­y labeled,” says Mr Lee. “Every bank, insurance company, every loan company, every e-commerce site has longitudin­al customer data.”

Tailored algorithms can help loan officers improve risk assessment, help banks detect fraudulent credit card activities, and help sales agents narrow down lists of potential customers “to determine which ones you’ll apply telesales prospects”.

One of the firm’s investment­s is a startup called SmartFinan­ce, which uses AI to help determine how to make loans over the internet. The company’s app uses as many as 1,200 data points collected by its smartphone app to assign credit ratings for would-be customers.

While China’s leading internet companies – Baidu, Alibaba, Tencent, and others – all have significan­t in-house AI teams, Mr Lee recognises that state-run insurance companies, investment firms, logistics managers and others won’t necessaril­y have the reputation, swanky offices, or high salaries to attract top-notch AI scientists, whose numbers remain scarce in China. So he is configurin­g his AI Institute to provide solutions or services directly, like a high-tech consultanc­y.

“We’re building an AI solutions team to talk to big businesses” about designing customised recommenda­tion engines, risk management tools, etc, explains Mr Lee.

The goal is to “design reusable AI toolkits,” says John Woo, a vice president at the AI Institute. He and Mr Lee expect the financial industry in China will be among the first to be radically transforme­d by the applicatio­n of AI. “For picking stocks, the future of mutual funds will all be made this way,” by algorithms, says Mr Lee. “Today you have all these Morningsta­r ratings of funds – but AI will replace all these one day.”

On the August morning that Bloomberg visited Sinovation Venture’s offices in northern Beijing, about three dozen students from universiti­es both in the US and China were putting the final tweaks to their projects undertaken at summer camps.

The inaugural class of DeeCamp students – ranging from undergrads to PhD candidates – had been selected from more than 1,000 applicants, says Mr Woo.

The objective is to get more students interested in AI, especially in China, and perhaps identify Sinovation’s future interns or employees.

One student team designed a buggy out of parts ordered on Amazon and Taobao, which uses a spinning lidar sensor mounted on top to develop a map of the office layout.

It recognizes ceiling pipes and doorways, although it has more trouble recognisin­g feet and other obstacles directly in front of it.

Still, for about five weeks labour, it’s an impressive effort. “It reminds me of a small child,” says Mr Woo, who has two children. “It is still teaching itself about the world.’’

Mr Lee set up the summer camp because of the talent shortage in the industry. He anticipate­s bringing in such student groups multiple times a year in the future, and will probably end up hiring some because he needs the brainpower.

“AI is the most important part of our investment portfolio,’’ he says.

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 ?? Bloomberg ?? Kai-Fu Lee focuses his AI Institute work on business efficienci­es, main picture. Employees engaged in projects at Sinovation Ventures, above
Bloomberg Kai-Fu Lee focuses his AI Institute work on business efficienci­es, main picture. Employees engaged in projects at Sinovation Ventures, above

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