
Chinese tech giant Alibaba recently saw its shares leap almost 8%, reaching a peak not seen in nearly four years. This jump came as the company announced an ambitious increase in its artificial intelligence (AI) spending, alongside an aggressive global expansion of its data center infrastructure.
The move resulted in more investor confidence, which also spotlights Alibaba’s gamble on AI as a core growth driver beyond its well-established e-commerce empire.
The announcement came during Alibaba’s annual Apsara Conference 2025, where CEO Eddie Wu shared plans to boost AI investments well beyond the previously announced and staggering $53 billion committed to building AI-infrastructure over the period of three years.
Wu emphasized that the rapid advancements and soaring demand in AI space exceeded the company’s initial expectations, pushing them to deepen their financial commitments to capitalize on the AI revolution.
In addition to the commitment to more AI spending was also the launch of Qwen3-Max, Alibaba’s largest AI model yet. Unlike traditional chatbots like ChatGPT that depend heavily on human input, Qwen3-Max can make decisions and take actions independently based on user goals. This positions Alibaba as a serious competitor, joining leading AI developers worldwide like OpenAI, Google, and Anthropic.
Further solidifying Alibaba’s strategic decision to increase its AI spending is its newly announced partnership with Nvidia, the American chip powerhouse that is known for its unprecedented AI hardware innovation.
The collaboration with Nvidia will integrate the tech giant’s Physical AI software that works in robotics, autonomous vehicles, and complex simulations, into Alibaba’s AI platform.
Alibaba Cloud, the cloud division and the intelligence backbone of Alibaba Group, also unveiled plans to expand its data center footprint worldwide. The Chinese company will open and launch new data centers in Brazil, France, and the Netherlands, with more plans to establish additional data centers in Mexico, Japan, South Korea, Malaysia, and Dubai in the coming year.
“Our strategic expansion of global infrastructure is designed to cater for the accelerating demand from forward-thinking customers. Alibaba Cloud stands at the forefront of the AI innovation, co-evolving with our customers with full-stack AI and cloud solutions that support businesses anytime and anywhere,” Dr Feifei Lei, President of International Business and SVP of Alibaba Cloud Intelligence Group, said in a press release.
“We are here to help partners and customers to design, launch, and scale groundbreaking AI agents and applications, fueling the next generation of digital innovation and unlocking unprecedented value in the global marketplace,” Lei continued.
Complementing this physical expansion, Alibaba is also setting up regional service centers in Indonesia and Germany with multilingual 24/7 customer support.
Joining rivals like U.S. giants Microsoft, Google, and OpenAI in the escalating AI arms race, Alibaba’s bet on AI increased spending aims to secure its place at the forefront of the race, especially in the context of the recent geopolitical tensions between the U.S. and China.