Chinese AI champions offer global investors a rare valuation discount — if they can navigate the geopolitical risks.
Chinese AI champions offer global investors a rare valuation discount — if they can navigate the geopolitical risks.

Chinese AI champions offer global investors a rare valuation discount — if they can navigate the geopolitical risks.
Chinese technology giants investing in artificial intelligence trade at roughly half the valuation of US peers, creating a rare bargain in a market otherwise defined by AI exuberance.
"This is an attractive opportunity," Eva Lee, head of Greater China equities at Swiss bank UBS, said in a recent note, describing top AI companies at "historically low valuations."
Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. trades at 17 times forward earnings after integrating its Qwen AI model across e-commerce platforms and committing $50 billion to cloud infrastructure over the next few years. Amazon.com Inc., which runs a similar collection of businesses, commands a forward P/E of 27. Baidu Inc., the robotaxi leader, trades at 14 times expected earnings, while Tencent Holdings Ltd., testing an AI agent for its WeChat app, fetches just 13 times. CATL, the battery giant that investment banks say could benefit from AI data center power demand, trades at 19 times on the Shenzhen Stock Exchange.
China accounts for 10 percent of global AI-related market capitalization, yet global mutual fund managers allocate just 1.2 percent of their tech portfolios to Chinese AI equities, according to Goldman Sachs. For investors already heavily exposed to US-centric AI leaders, Chinese shares offer differentiated exposure at a fraction of the price — but the discount comes with strings attached.
The Valuation Gap in Numbers
The disparity is starkest among the largest players. Alibaba's forward P/E of 17 compares with 27 for Amazon, a 37 percent discount for a company that Morgan Stanley calls "a global AI winner." Tencent's 13 times multiple is less than half the 30-plus commanded by Meta Platforms Inc. and Google parent Alphabet Inc. Even Nvidia Corp., the AI chip leader, trades at 23 times forward earnings — above Alibaba, Baidu and Tencent despite facing mounting competitive pressure from Chinese chip designers.
Not every Chinese AI stock is cheap. Cambricon Technologies Corp., which designs AI chips competing with Nvidia, has tripled over the past year and trades at 128 times forward earnings. Zhipu, a large language model developer that listed in Hong Kong in January, now trades at nine times its IPO price. But these are exceptions in a market where the largest AI players remain deeply discounted by global standards.
Geopolitics Caps the Upside
The valuation gap exists for a reason. The Pentagon this month added Alibaba to its list of Chinese businesses linked to Beijing's military, potentially limiting the company's US operations. Alibaba said it had no connection to the Chinese military. SMIC, the country's largest chipmaker, sits on a US blacklist that bars American investors from buying its shares. Memory-chip maker CXMT won approval last month for a Shanghai IPO that could raise about $4 billion, but it enters a market dominated by Samsung Electronics Co., SK Hynix Inc. and Micron Technology Inc. — companies that have recently topped $1 trillion in combined market value thanks to the AI chip boom.
The risk is that Chinese AI companies remain mostly confined to their domestic market, which is in an economic slowdown. While large, China alone cannot match the global reach that companies such as Amazon and Google have built.
Beijing's Bet on AI Independence
The Chinese government is backing the industry with favorable policies and financial incentives, seeking to build a technology industry independent of Washington. DeepSeek's release of a competitive large language model early last year proved local firms could compete globally, triggering a re-rating of Chinese tech stocks. Alibaba is designing its own AI chips, much like Amazon and Google, and pouring capital into cloud infrastructure that could serve as the backbone for China's AI ambitions.
For investors willing to accept the geopolitical risk, the question is whether the valuation discount compensates for the constraints. At 13 to 17 times earnings for the largest players, Goldman's So said, the market is pricing in a China-only future. If any of these companies find a path to global AI revenue, the upside could be substantial.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.