Nvidia’s CPU move and China’s EV makers go solid - FT中文网
登录×
电子邮件/用户名
密码
记住我
请输入邮箱和密码进行绑定操作:
请输入手机号码,通过短信验证(目前仅支持中国大陆地区的手机号):
请您阅读我们的用户注册协议隐私权保护政策,点击下方按钮即视为您接受。
FT商学院

Nvidia’s CPU move and China’s EV makers go solid

The inside story on the Asia tech trends that matter, from Nikkei Asia and the Financial Times
00:00
{"text":[[{"start":13.8,"text":"Hello everyone. This is Cissy from Hong Kong, your #techAsia host this week."}],[{"start":18.8,"text":"The AI story moved fast this week and on multiple fronts simultaneously. In the US, Anthropic quietly filed for an initial public offering after recently raising capital at a massive $965bn valuation. In China, two of the country’s leading artificial intelligence start-ups, MiniMax and Zhipu, filed for Shanghai dual listings, just six months after the duo’s blockbuster IPOs in Hong Kong, a sign that Chinese AI is entering a new phase of institutional capital formation."}],[{"start":52.099999999999994,"text":"The week’s most dramatic market moment came from Tencent, with its shares posting their biggest intraday gain since late 2022 after the FT reported the company is testing a prototype AI agent to help its ubiquitous app WeChat’s 1.4bn users autonomously navigate its millions of mini programs. In Tencent’s Q4 earnings call, the company already said that a new agentic AI for WeChat was under development. Reports that the product could be launched as early as this month suggested a faster than expected rollout and the company appears to be accelerating its AI push, which might have fuelled the share rally, though its stock price dipped around 3 per cent the next day."}],[{"start":91.39999999999999,"text":"For context: Tencent’s shares have fallen more than 20 per cent since the start of the year amid growing investor concerns that it was losing ground to Alibaba and ByteDance in the AI race, with its Hunyuan foundation model widely perceived as trailing rival offerings. But can a successful WeChat agent fundamentally change how investors perceive the company? Time will tell."}],[{"start":111.85,"text":"Meanwhile, with the AI infrastructure race being constrained by memory supply as much as anything else, SK Group Chair Chey Tae-won, speaking at Taipei’s Computex, announced plans for SK Hynix to double wafer production capacity over five years to meet surging AI demand. As a key supplier of Nvidia, the announcement was met with Jensen Huang’s witty message: Please make more, which Huang signed on an HBM4E wafer in front of cameras when he visited the South Korean chipmaker’s booth."}],[{"start":144.05,"text":"Nvidia’s new direction"}],[{"start":146.45000000000002,"text":"Nvidia is pushing into personal computing with RTX Spark, its chip that brings data-centre-grade AI processing to laptops. The latest chip will enable AI agents to run locally on your device, redefining how you use PCs in the future."}],[{"start":162.10000000000002,"text":"Nvidia is known for its graphics processing units, or GPUs, the chips that power artificial intelligence. But GPUs need to work alongside central processing units, or CPUs, which have traditionally been dominated by Intel and AMD. Nvidia’s foray into the CPU market shows its broader ambition to own more of the computing stack, write Nikkei Asia’s Cheng Ting-Fang and Lauly Li."}],[{"start":186.90000000000003,"text":"Its latest AI system, called Vera Rubin, is the first to include a dedicated rack of 256 of Nvidia’s own Vera CPUs. Nvidia has already sold millions of its previous-generation Grace Blackwell systems, making it “one of the largest CPU makers in the world,” CEO Jensen Huang claimed at Nvidia’s GTC event in Taipei."}],[{"start":211.15000000000003,"text":"Meanwhile, its largest-ever supercomputing systems for AI, called Vera Rubin NVL 72, are now in full production to power AI agents."}],[{"start":221.50000000000003,"text":"An agent for change"}],[{"start":223.05000000000004,"text":"Tencent is testing an embedded AI agent for WeChat, the ubiquitous “superapp” used across China, writes the FT’s Zijing Wu."}],[{"start":231.45000000000005,"text":"The company is testing a prototype of the agent, which can help users complete tasks within the app, aiming to start the compliance process required before a public launch as soon as this month, according to two people with knowledge of the plan."}],[{"start":244.30000000000004,"text":"After that, Tencent plans to test the agent on a small group of outside users before initiating a phased rollout."}],[{"start":252.20000000000005,"text":"However, a public launch date has not been set because the amount of time required for the compliance process is uncertain, while executives are being careful to properly test the agent before a wider release."}],[{"start":264.50000000000006,"text":"Tencent shares rose 10.5 per cent in Hong Kong on Tuesday after the FT report was published."}],[{"start":271.55000000000007,"text":"The successful launch of an AI agent on China’s most-used app could help Tencent leapfrog its domestic rivals, which have built stronger models and already implemented agents across their platforms."}],[{"start":282.20000000000005,"text":"Alibaba has integrated its ecommerce, travel and mapping services into its Qwen AI app, while ByteDance has added agentic functions such as online shopping to its Doubao app."}],[{"start":293.35,"text":"Tencent declined to comment."}],[{"start":296.20000000000005,"text":"SoftBank dethrones Toyota"}],[{"start":null,"text":"
Line chart of ¥tn showing SoftBank Group surpasses Toyota in market cap
"}],[{"start":298.90000000000003,"text":"As the AI rally accelerates across global stock markets, shares of SoftBank Group, one of the most aggressive AI investors in the world, continue to surge, pushing its market capitalisation past Toyota Motor’s for the first time in more than two decades, writes Nikkei Asia’s Jada Nagumo."}],[{"start":316.65000000000003,"text":"The surge was driven by the tech conglomerate’s stellar earnings and huge bet on ChatGPT developer OpenAI. SoftBank completed an investment of $10bn in OpenAI in April and committed to inject a further $20bn this year, which would bring its total investment to roughly $65bn."}],[{"start":338.40000000000003,"text":"The change signals a broader reordering in the Japanese equity market, where automakers, along with banks, steelmakers, utilities and other traditional heavy industries, are losing ground to chipmakers and artificial intelligence-related companies."}],[{"start":352.95000000000005,"text":"A solid strategy"}],[{"start":354.65000000000003,"text":"Chinese automakers SAIC Motor and BYD are set to launch electric vehicles equipped with all-solid-state batteries in 2027, the next generation of EV batteries deemed a game-changer as they are safer and boast a higher energy density than current lithium-ion batteries, write Nikkei’s Shizuka Tanabe and Tomoko Wakasugi."}],[{"start":375.75000000000006,"text":"MG, a British brand under SAIC’s umbrella, has already launched models equipped with semi-solid batteries that reduce liquid electrolyte content to 5 per cent."}],[{"start":387.15000000000003,"text":"In Japan, Toyota Motor aims to commercialise EVs with all-solid-state batteries between 2027 and 2028. Nissan Motor is targeting commercialisation by fiscal 2028, which ends in March of 2029, while Honda Motor is aiming for the latter half of the 2020s."}],[{"start":406.05,"text":"Suggested reads"}],[{"start":null,"text":"
  1. Alibaba opens Qwen to external apps as China’s AI agent race intensifies (Nikkei Asia)

  2. SoftBank pledges 75bn euros to build Europe’s biggest AI facility in France (FT)

  3. Applied Materials looks to hire 25% more chip talent in Southeast Asia (Nikkei Asia)

  4. How Iran’s military harnesses western AI (FT)

  5. Pudu Robotics eyes Hong Kong listing amid geopolitical risks (Nikkei Asia)

  6. The chip and memory stock frenzy (FT)

  7. SK Hynix ascends as new memory king with high-bandwidth AI chips (Nikkei Asia)

  8. EU fines China’s Temu 200mn euros for failing to prevent sale of illegal goods (FT)

  9. Kioxia briefly overtakes Toyota, rises to No. 2 in Japan by market cap (Nikkei Asia)

  10. Payments group accused of being ‘Chinese backdoor’ moves staff out of China (FT)

"}],[{"start":407.95,"text":"#techAsia is co-ordinated by Nikkei Asia’s Katherine Creel in Tokyo, with assistance from the FT tech desk in London.  "}],[{"start":416.09999999999997,"text":"Sign up here at Nikkei Asia to receive #techAsia each week. The editorial team can be reached at techasia@nex.nikkei.co.jp"}],[{"start":433.55,"text":""}]],"url":"https://audio.ftcn.net.cn/album/a_1780724484_9392.mp3"}
版权声明:本文版权归FT中文网所有,未经允许任何单位或个人不得转载,复制或以任何其他方式使用本文全部或部分,侵权必究。
设置字号×
最小
较小
默认
较大
最大
分享×