Monday, November 17, 2025

Tencent’s AI Restraint Shows Risk of Alibaba, JD Food War

Food delivery couriers for Meituan wait for customers' orders in Beijing.
Food delivery couriers for Meituan wait for customers’ orders in Beijing.

China’s biggest tech companies are bouncing back after years on the ropes with outsized ambitions to dominate in everything from robots and smart glasses to cheap meals. But investors want them to focus their spending where it counts — AI.

From Meta Platforms Inc. to Google, one topic has dominated the conversation this tech earnings season: how Silicon Valley’s leaders will invest to seize the momentum in a game-changing technology. In China, the industry is just as enthralled by a three-way battle to deliver the cheapest meals and knick-knacks, fastest. That conflict between Alibaba Group Holding Ltd., JD.com Inc. and Meituan — both on social media and in the physical consumer arena — isn’t just compressing margins and irking investors — it’s risking Beijing’s scrutiny.

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So far this year JD, Alibaba and Meituan have pledged or spent billions of dollars hiring delivery people, creating coupons and plying their millions of daily users with advertising about free milk tea and other instant retail promotions. Investors responded with a sell-off in Meituan and JD, the most exposed to the price war, shedding around a combined $100 billion in market value since late last year. Things came to a head last month when the industry regulator called all three into a private meeting to lay down the law. And days later, the trio coordinated contrite statements promising to end “disorderly competition.”

But in reality, they’ve no choice but to keep going, analysts say, because they’re essentially fighting for the lifeblood of their business: users. With AI still years away from monetization, that’s become the central existential problem to China Tech Inc.

“We want less food delivery wars, and more reasons to be optimistic about AI monetization,” said Vey-Sern Ling, managing director at Union Bancaire Privee. “Ultimately for tech companies to perform they have to deliver top line growth. Progress on the monetization of AI is one way — whether directly, such as through the provision of cloud services or indirectly by enhancing their respective core businesses.”

After years of regulatory scrutiny and Covid-era disruption, the country’s biggest tech firms are once again ramping up deals and competing fiercely for users to propel growth. Investors have piled into China’s tech resurgence over the past year, betting on the country’s biggest firms after a rapprochement with President Xi Jinping’s government in February. Those companies are still trading far below their peak. The food wars didn’t help. One outlier however has been Tencent — it’s outperformed its biggest peers this summer.

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