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China AI chip firm Biren raises new funds, plans Hong Kong IPO

China AI chip firm Biren raises new funds, plans Hong Kong IPO

Time of India4 days ago

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Chinese AI chip startup Biren Technology has raised about 1.5 billion yuan ($207 million) in fresh funding and is preparing for a Hong Kong initial public offering, people familiar with the matter said.The funding round and IPO plan come as China seeks to develop domestic alternatives to U.S. semiconductors amid escalating export restrictions by Washington on advanced chips.Beijing has prioritised building homegrown champions in graphics processing units (GPUs), which are critical for artificial intelligence development.The 1.5 billion yuan funding round was led primarily by state-linked investors, two of the sources said. Participants included a state-backed fund from Guangdong province and another from the Shanghai government, according to one source.Biren initially filed documents for a mainland China listing last year but has since shifted focus to Hong Kong, partly due to stricter regulatory requirements on the mainland including less tolerance for loss-making companies, two of the sources said.The company is preparing to file for a Hong Kong listing in the third quarter, potentially as early as August, one source said. It was not immediately clear if Biren had appointed advisers for the IPO.Biren was valued at approximately 14 billion yuan prior to the latest funding round, two of the sources said.Biren, and the Guangdong provincial and Shanghai governments, did not immediately respond to requests for comment.The sources, who spoke to Reuters, declined to be named as the information is not public.Developing domestic GPU capabilities has become critical for China as the U.S. has tightened export restrictions on advanced semiconductors. The latest measures, implemented in April, prompted U.S. chip giant Nvidia to halt sales of its H20 AI chips to Chinese customers.The potential market for Chinese AI chip companies is substantial. Investment bank Morgan Stanley predicted in a May client note that domestic GPU makers could generate 287 billion yuan in sales by 2027, capturing 70% of the Chinese market compared with 30% last year.Founded in 2019, Biren's cofounders include Zhang Wen, formerly a president at leading AI face-recognition company SenseTime, and Jiao Guofang, who previously worked at Qualcomm and Huawei.The company initially drew attention from investors and industry observers in 2022 when it unveiled its first batch of products, including the BR100 chip, which it claimed could match the performance of Nvidia's advanced H100 AI processor.However, the company was added to the U.S. 'Entity List' in 2023, preventing it from using leading global foundries such as Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing to manufacture its chips.Biren has since experienced significant upheaval, with some senior executives departing, including co-founder Xu Lingjie.It continues to operate at a loss and generates limited revenue, recording 400 million yuan in sales in 2024, according to two of the sources.The company's general-purpose GPU products have been deployed across multiple intelligent computing centers, and its partners include China Mobile , China Telecom, ZTE, and the Shanghai AI Laboratory, according to its official website.Some of these companies have also been targeted by U.S. restrictions, including China Mobile and China Telecom, which the Federal Communications Commission said in March it is investigating for potential evasion of U.S. sanctions.Biren also faces intense competition from other Chinese AI chip companies, including Huawei and peers such as Tencent-backed Enflame and Metax.

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US, China Announce A Trade Agreement, Again. Here Is What It Means
US, China Announce A Trade Agreement, Again. Here Is What It Means

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US, China Announce A Trade Agreement, Again. Here Is What It Means

Washington: The United States and China have reached an agreement - again - to de-escalate trade tensions. But details are scarce, and the latest pact leaves major issues between the world's two biggest economies unresolved. President Donald Trump said late Thursday that a deal with China had been signed "the other day.'' China's Commerce Ministry confirmed Friday that some type of arrangement had been reached but offered few details about it. Sudden shifts and a lack of clarity have been hallmarks of Trump's trade policy since he returned to the White House determined to overturn a global trading system that he says is unfair to the United States and its workers. He's been engaged for months in a battle with China that has mostly revealed how much pain the two countries can inflict on each other. And he's racing against a July 8 deadline to reach deals with other major US trading partners. 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"Silence regarding the terms suggests that there is less substance to the deal than the Trump Administration implies," said Moon, who also served as a diplomat in China. Wait. This sounds familiar. How did we get here? The agreement that emerged Thursday and Friday builds on a "framework'' that Trump announced June 11 after two days of high-level US-China talks in London. Then, he announced, China had agreed to ease restrictions on rare earths. In return, the United States said it would stop seeking to revoke the visas of Chinese students on US college campuses. And last month, after another meeting in Geneva, the two countries had agreed to dramatically reduce massive taxes they'd slapped on each other's products, which had reached as high as 145% against China and 125% against the US. Those triple-digit tariffs threatened to effectively end trade between the United States and China and caused a frightening sell-off in financial markets. 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NBA & Skechers Drop Season 2 of Hoop Nation in India
NBA & Skechers Drop Season 2 of Hoop Nation in India

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Baidu to Open Source ERNIE AI Model, Shaking Up Global AI Arena
Baidu to Open Source ERNIE AI Model, Shaking Up Global AI Arena

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Baidu to Open Source ERNIE AI Model, Shaking Up Global AI Arena

In a bold and unexpected move, Chinese tech giant Baidu has announced the open-sourcing of its flagship ERNIE generative AI model, marking a pivotal moment in the rapidly evolving global AI competition. The company confirmed that the rollout would begin gradually starting Monday. While not as abrupt or headline-grabbing as the recent debut of DeepSeek, Baidu's decision is already making waves in the AI community and prompting responses from key industry stakeholders worldwide. The development comes as a surprise, given Baidu's long-held stance favouring proprietary development. The company has traditionally maintained strict control over its AI tools and infrastructure, resisting the open-source wave that has swept through parts of the tech world. 'Baidu has always been very supportive of its proprietary business model and was vocal against open-source, but disruptors like DeepSeek have proven that open-source models can be as competitive and reliable as proprietary ones,' said Lian Jye Su, Chief Analyst at technology research firm Omdia, speaking to CNBC earlier. Although the move might not have the dramatic impact DeepSeek generated, experts are calling it an important step in AI's broader evolution. 'This isn't just a China story. Every time a major lab open-sources a powerful model, it raises the bar for the entire industry,' said Sean Ren, Associate Professor of Computer Science at the University of Southern California and Samsung's AI Researcher of the Year. Ren pointed out that open-source models challenge industry norms, especially for closed-source providers like OpenAI and Anthropic. 'While most consumers don't care whether a model's code is open-sourced, they do care about lower costs, better performance, and support for their language or region. Those benefits often come from open models, which give developers and researchers more freedom to iterate, customize, and deploy faster,' he explained. From a pricing standpoint, industry analysts see Baidu's move as a potential game-changer. Alec Strasmore, founder of AI advisory Epic Loot, compared the shift to a price war. 'Baidu just threw a Molotov into the AI world,' he declared. 'OpenAI, Anthropic, DeepSeek — all these guys who thought they were selling top-notch champagne are about to realise that Baidu will be giving away something just as powerful.' He continued, 'This isn't a competition; it's a declaration of war on pricing.' According to Strasmore, startups and smaller developers may soon rethink paying premium prices for AI access. This new strategy isn't entirely unanticipated. Earlier in March, Baidu claimed that its latest model, ERNIE X1, could match DeepSeek's R1 in performance while costing half as much. CEO Robin Li also hinted at the company's global ambitions during an April developer event. 'Our releases aim to empower developers to build the best applications — without having to worry about model capability, costs, or development tools,' Li said at the time. However, not all experts believe Baidu's open-source shift will immediately shake the Western market. Cliff Jurkiewicz, VP of Global Strategy at applied AI firm Phenom, suggested the news might not even register in the U.S. tech scene. 'The news of Baidu going open source probably lands with a big thud,' he commented. 'Most people in the United States don't even know it's a Chinese tech company.' Drawing parallels with the early Android ecosystem, Jurkiewicz explained that while open systems provide flexibility, they can also be challenging to manage. 'When Android first emerged, its standout feature was that it was configurable and customisable. But it was almost too much work… Android, out of the box, is plain and vanilla, so it has to be customised, and that's a real challenge,' he noted. As Baidu begins its rollout, all eyes are now on how this strategic pivot will reshape the global AI landscape — from affordability and accessibility to the core philosophies of AI development.

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