A trio of Chinese generative artificial intelligence (gen AI) breakthroughs in late January have shaken the perception of US dominance. For equity investors, they present clear signs that a growth cycle driven not by hardware build-out, but accelerating gen AI adoption, could be taking shape.
In our view, the potential upside for internet platforms and Edge AI hardware providers could offset or even eclipse an expected cyclical downturn in the graphic processing unit (GPU) and compute power sector going into 2026. We explain how this is shaping our convictions on the gen AI theme below.
Three distinct events in late January thrust China’s impressive gen AI capabilities, achieved in the face of US export restrictions on advanced semiconductors, into the international spotlight:
The release of DeepSeek-R1 model captured the most attention. The open-source model, issued under an MIT license, uses a mixture-of-experts (MoE) approach with 37 billion active parameters out of 671 bn total parameters. The key development relative to previous versions is its comparable performance versus other gen AI models, including ChatGPT4, across multiple reasoning tests (see Figure 1) and at much better pricing. The DeepSeek-R1 model was apparently trained on a limited number of Nvidia1 chips, meaning its costs are 90% lower than those of ChatGPT owner OpenAI’s models in both training and inference (see Figure 2).
FIG 1. DeepSeek-R1 vs other reasoning models2
FIG 2. Pricing comparison for inference: DeepSeek-R1 vs OpenAI models3
Unsurprisingly, this raised questions about Silicon Valley tech firms’ plans to spend billions on building their gen AI infrastructure. Yet, in our view, there are two major concerns for the market. First, is there a risk of lower demand for advanced compute hardware, including semiconductors? And second, what should investors expect from China’s ‘sudden’ advancement in gen AI?
In our view, the initial sharp market sell-off can be attributed to several factors:
What should investors expect from China’s ‘sudden’ advancement in gen AI?
Despite the ability of DeepSeek-R1 to perform strongly without top chips, we think it is too early to conclude that a structural downshift in compute power required by newer gen AI models will take place, given that:
In our view, DeepSeek’s breakthrough is not revolutionary but has evolved from several key concepts, chiefly the MoE approach. In the tech sector, cost per function is always declining, usually at 15-25% per year 4, and this can be even faster in the early days of the adoption curve. We believe this is true for gen AI and, therefore, we expect to see the release of more efficient models over the next one-to-two years given how many start-ups focused on this technology have been formed.
Read also: Asian markets: long-term tailwinds fuelling growth, consumption and tech
We have long seen the rise of gen AI as an attractive investment theme. Using the dotcom bubble as an example, we believe the current stage of the gen AI cycle is closer to the year 1996 than the boom’s 1999 peak. If we are right, a very long adoption curve remains ahead of us. Consequently, the head-turning DeepSeek and Alibaba releases lead us to the following views:
We provide an overview of our views on Asia tech equities in Figure 3.
FIG 3. A snapshot of the tech views informing our Asia High Conviction strategy5
Read also: Asian markets: find what other investors don’t see
Leading semiconductor firms, especially Nvidia1, and upstream manufacturers have faced the brunt of the market impact resulting from the release of DeepSeek-R1, as these areas could have more to lose from a scenario in which there is a downgrade of growth expectations in advanced GPU demand and compute power requirements. Although these fears are slightly overblown, in our view, we are also cognisant of the cyclicality in this sector going into 2026, and the potential for less-than-expected growth. However, at a macro level, we expect the advancement of China’s various LLMs to drive further and faster the adoption of AGI, which could benefit device manufacturers in the Edge AI segment as well as internet platform companies in Asia.
As such, in our strategy we have shifted towards gen AI adopters and Edge AI hardware providers instead of pure beneficiaries of demand for AI infrastructure. We believe gen AI adoption, including the use of AGI, is a structural phenomenon and we are at the beginning of this three-to-five-year trend. As a result, we are adjusting our positioning, and are currently focused on prominent Chinese internet platforms.
important information.
For professional investors use only
This document is a Corporate Communication for Professional Investors only and is not a marketing communication related to a fund, an investment product or investment services in your country. This document is not intended to provide investment, tax, accounting, professional or legal advice.
Read more.