Alibaba (NYSE:BABA) just dropped a bomb, reducing the prices of its Qwen-VL visual language model by up to 85%. The move, announced Tuesday, reflects an aggressive drive to dominate China’s AI market, where competition between tech giants like Tencent (TCEHY), Baidu (NASDAQ:BIDU), and ByteDance is at its peak. Alibaba’s latest price cuts follow previous reductions of up to 97% and reinforce its strategy to retain enterprise customers by making cutting-edge AI solutions more accessible. Yet despite the headline-grabbing move, the stock barely flinched, closing up just 0.5% in Hong Kong.
So what’s the problem here? While others focus on consumer-facing AI, like OpenAI’s ChatGPT, Alibaba is betting big on enterprise applications. The Qwen series, which processes both text and images, is already used by more than 90,000 businesses, and this pricing overhaul could open the floodgates to even wider adoption. It is clear that Alibaba wants to be the go-to player for companies looking to integrate AI into their operations without breaking the bank. These price cuts aren’t just a discount, they’re a declaration of war in the battle for AI supremacy.
For investors, that raises the stakes. The big question: Will these price drops lead to the kind of adoption that justifies the drop in revenue? Or will it trigger a brutal price war that erodes margins across the industry? As generative AI reshapes the technology landscape, Alibaba’s overall strategy could be a masterstroke or a gamble with minimal returns. Either way, the market will be watching closely to see if this is the spark that sets Alibaba apart or just another salvo in an increasingly AI-crowded battlefield.
This article first appeared on GuruFocus.