E-commerce giant doubles down on AI with Nvidia partnership and global cloud expansion
Alibaba (BABA) shares surged nearly 9% Tuesday, reaching their highest level in almost four years, after the company announced plans to increase its already massive artificial intelligence (AI) spending beyond the previously pledged $53 billion. The move signals the Chinese tech giant’s determination to compete head-to-head with U.S. Big Tech companies in the rapidly escalating AI arms race.
Speaking at a conference in Hangzhou, CEO Eddie Wu emphasized that global AI investment is projected to reach $4 trillion over the next five years, and Alibaba must scale accordingly. While Wu did not disclose the new size of the investment, he confirmed the company will build on its February plan to accelerate model development, infrastructure, and chip technology.
In a major strategic step, Alibaba also unveiled a software partnership with Nvidia (NVDA) to integrate the chipmaker’s AI training tools for robotics and autonomous vehicles. Though financial terms were not disclosed, the deal comes as U.S.-China trade tensions complicate access to cutting-edge chips, with Beijing pushing domestic firms to develop alternatives.
Wu highlighted Alibaba’s ambition to position its cloud division as a full-stack AI provider. The unit, which already services international clients in the U.S. and Australia, will expand with new data centers in Brazil, France, and the Netherlands. Cloud revenue climbed 26% year over year in the April–June quarter, reinforcing its role alongside e-commerce as a growth engine.
Alibaba’s bold AI expansion follows similar commitments from Amazon, Alphabet, Microsoft, and Meta, which together expect to spend $364 billion on AI in fiscal 2025. Investor enthusiasm was evident as Cathie Wood’s Ark Invest bought more than $16 billion worth of Alibaba shares this week.
You might like this article:Wells Fargo Upgrades Amazon on AWS Growth Outlook