China

Intelligence for Better Decision Making

China Accelerates AI Integration with Nationwide Data Initiatives and Sector Reforms
Jan. 2, 2026 | Technology & Innovation

China is accelerating efforts to integrate artificial intelligence across its economy and regulatory framework.

**China’s “AI Plus” initiative drives a national push to embed AI deeply into six key sectors by 2027 and to achieve widespread adoption of AI-driven applications by 2030.**
This initiative aligns with a broader strategy to establish the data infrastructure, systems, and markets required for high-quality, AI-driven economic growth.

**By 2025, the National Data Administration and 26 other ministries have coordinated the creation of more than 100,000 high-quality datasets totaling over 890 petabytes.**
These efforts included selecting 72 leading organizations to pilot dataset construction in science, education, and embodied intelligence, completing 140 critical dataset tasks that now serve as foundational resources for AI development.

**That same year, the National Data Administration reinforced five core elements—systems, infrastructure, scenarios, markets, and industries—to improve data-driven problem solving.**
Reforms advanced the market-oriented allocation of data elements, accelerating the commercialization and valorization of data assets, while international cooperation in the data sector yielded positive outcomes.

**Under the “East Data, West Computing” project, China consolidated 80 percent of its smart computing resources into eight major hubs.**
A nationwide monitoring and scheduling system began overseeing 857,000 petaflops of computing capacity and allocating 96,000 petaflops for use. At the same time, a unified public data resource registration platform reached full provincial coverage, logging over 130,000 distinct data items.

**The digital economy posted robust growth in 2024 and 2025, with China leading the world in invention patents granted within core digital industries.**
Digital consumption and trade expanded steadily, and the digital economy’s value-added output is projected to reach 49 trillion yuan in 2025—around 35 percent of GDP—while the share contributed by core digital industries continues to rise.

**In 2025 the National Data Administration also spearheaded standardization efforts, issuing 48 national standards and technical documents on data infrastructure and products and publishing four new international standards on metadata and data quality.**
It launched standard validation pilots, formed six industry application groups, and conducted data annotation trials in seven cities, generating over 85 petabytes of annotated data to support the development of 260 AI models.

**Looking ahead to 2026, designated the “Year of Data Element Value Release,” China plans to enhance data flows, optimize resource allocation, boost market activity, and nurture a thriving ecosystem.**
The government will focus on ensuring data availability, usability, security, and seamless integration into economic value-creation processes to drive further economic and social progress through AI and digital innovation.
MiniMax Drives AI IPO Surge Amid Growing Competition Among Chinese Startups
Jan. 2, 2026 | Competitiveness

Chinese AI startups are making significant strides as they pursue public listings and fresh capital.

**MiniMax Group has filed for an initial public offering on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange, aiming to raise between HK$3.8 billion and HK$4.19 billion (approximately USD 490 million to USD 538 million) by selling 25.4 million shares at HK$151 to HK$165 each.**
This pricing implies a market valuation between HK$50.4 billion and HK$54.4 billion (around USD 6.5 billion to USD 7.0 billion). China International Capital Corp and UBS sponsor the offering, while Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley coordinate the IPO.

**Founded in early 2022 by former SenseTime executive Yan Junjie, MiniMax develops multimodal AI models that process text, audio, images, video and music.**
Its flagship large language model powers the Hailuo AI app, the Talkie chatbot, the Xingye virtual character generator and open platforms for enterprise and developer integration. By September 2025, the company had reached over 212 million users worldwide.

**In the first nine months of 2025, MiniMax nearly tripled revenue year-on-year to USD 53.4 million, with more than 70 percent coming from international markets.**
Despite this growth and expanding user engagement, the company remains unprofitable. It reported net losses of USD 269 million in 2023, USD 465 million in 2024 and USD 512 million as of September 30, 2025. Under non-IFRS measures, adjusted net losses totaled USD 186 million for the nine-month period ended September 2025.

**MiniMax plans to invest about 90 percent of the IPO proceeds in research and development over the next five years, allocating the remaining 10 percent to working capital and general corporate purposes.**
Fourteen cornerstone investors, including Aspex Management, Eastspring Investments, Mirae Asset Financial Group, Alibaba Group Holding and E Fund Management, have committed around HK$2.7 billion in subscriptions.

**This public offering reflects growing investor interest in China’s domestic AI sector, driven by the success of local generative AI services such as DeepSeek.**
It also coincides with a similar listing attempt by Zhipu Huazhang Technology, illustrating the intense competition among Chinese AI firms to capitalize on rising market demand.

Monitored Intelligence for China - Jan. 2, 2026


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Erudite Risk takes an all risks approach to intelligence reporting. We categorize key intelligence into one of 40 different risk intelligence categories.

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Reset or Reprieve? Trump and Xi’s Busan Summit Offers Hope and Uncertainty

China-US Focus | English | AcademicThink | Jan. 2, 2026 | Shifting Geopolitical Alliances

In October 2025, Presidents Donald Trump and Xi Jinping met in Busan, South Korea, marking their first summit since Trump’s second term began. The 100-minute meeting produced headline agreements on trade, fentanyl control, and rare earth mineral export policies, reflecting cautious optimism but also highlighting divergent national agendas. The U.S. secured Chinese commitments to curb fentanyl flows, increase agricultural purchases, and lift export controls on rare earths, which had become a critical issue threatening key American industries.

For the Trump administration, the meeting emphasized both practical economic gains and symbolic political victories, particularly showcasing Trump’s negotiation skills and envisioning the summit as a step toward restoring respect and stability in U.S.–China relations. Trump publicly celebrated expanded Chinese agricultural purchases as a boon for American farmers and framed the dialogue as fostering mutual respect and peaceful collaboration. Beijing, meanwhile, sought relief from expansive U.S. tariffs and the removal of port fees, portraying the measures as provocative. The concession to reduce tariffs from 57 to 47 percent was a modest but significant diplomatic win for China, reinforcing its belief that a proactive and calibrated engagement strategy yields results.

China also valued cultivating a positive personal rapport with Trump to capitalize on flexible diplomatic channels absent in more traditional U.S. administrations. Broadly, the Busan summit illustrated Beijing’s shift from earlier aggressive diplomacy to a more disciplined approach that balances economic leverage with partnership narratives. Both sides publicly hailed the summit’s outcomes as successes, though substantial ambiguity remains regarding implementation, enforcement, and timelines. Chinese statements emphasized consensus and mutual understanding over binding commitments, signaling a preference for diplomatic flexibility.

Looking forward to 2026, multiple high-level meetings are planned, but underlying tensions persist due to differing expectations and interpretations of agreements. Trump’s vision of the U.S. and China as a global “G2” partnership contrasts with Beijing’s rejection of this status, emphasizing a focus on domestic governance rather than global leadership. This fundamental divergence in worldview threatens to undermine the fragile optimism born at Busan, as each side believes it has gained the upper hand while potentially misreading the other’s intentions. The summit may thus be remembered more for its symbolic restoration of dialogue than for durable resolution of deep-seated bilateral challenges.

Shanghai enacts new regulations to boost cruise economy

Xinhua | English | News | Jan. 2, 2026 | Regulation

Shanghai has enacted new regulations to promote the cruise economy, with a 27-article framework passed by the Standing Committee of the Shanghai Municipal People's Congress. These regulations will come into effect on March 1, 2026, aiming to support high-quality growth in the city's cruise industry.

Key measures include piloting "cruises to nowhere," allowing international ships to depart from and return to Shanghai without docking at any ports, operating within approved waters. The city will also enhance port services by accelerating the installation of shore power systems and encouraging home-port cruise ships to use this energy mode. Support for green fuels and new energy technologies is also emphasized.

The regulations focus on improving the competitiveness of the cruise industry by fostering port-city integration, promoting cultural, tourism, commercial, sports, and exhibition activities around waterfront areas and ports. Between 2006 and 2025, Shanghai hosted over 3,500 cruise ships and more than 18 million passengers, capturing over 60 percent of China's cruise market. Currently, Shanghai houses Asia's largest and the world's fourth-busiest cruise home port.

亚投行成立十年:促进全球共同发展 树立多边合作典范

Ten Years of the AIIB: Promoting Global Common Development and Setting a Model for Multilateral Cooperation

China Today | Local Language | News | Jan. 2, 2026 | UndeterminedEconomic Growth

Over the past ten years, the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB) has expanded its membership to 111 countries, covering 81% of the world’s population and 65% of global GDP. It has approved approximately 360 projects with close to $70 billion in financing, focusing on infrastructure that promotes common development and regional prosperity. The AIIB has established a reputation for professionalism, efficiency, and pragmatism, serving as a model for multilateral cooperation and global financial governance.

The AIIB operates on principles of multilateralism, emphasizing equal participation, joint consultation, and consensus decision-making among developing and developed member countries. The bank maintains over 100 cooperative relationships and more than 130 co-financed projects with other multilateral development institutions, positioning itself as a platform that counters unilateralism and protectionism by promoting openness and inclusiveness.

The bank’s projects have tangibly improved livelihoods across regions, with investments in renewable energy, infrastructure, water supply, and climate resilience. Examples include wind energy farms in Kazakhstan, urban slum upgrades in Indonesia, and metro construction in Egypt. The AIIB’s pragmatic and efficient approach has attracted a broad range of partners, enabling rapid growth in membership and project scale, and supporting sustainable development goals in diverse member countries.

Looking forward, the AIIB aims to increase annual financing to $17 billion by 2030, with a focus on cross-border connectivity and climate financing, which currently accounts for 50% of its approved funding. It recently approved a $1 billion climate-oriented loan to support Brazil’s ecological transition, exemplifying its commitment to green finance and collaboration with emerging economies. The AIIB continues to enhance regional integration, economic resilience, and sustainable infrastructure development, aligning with global efforts to address climate change and promote inclusive growth. China remains a key supporter, facilitating the AIIB’s development as a mature international multilateral platform dedicated to sustainable development and global cooperation.

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