Apple Intelligence in China: What Changes with Alibaba and Baidu
Apple has finally achieved what it has been seeking for over a year: bringing its generative artificial intelligence platform to China. The country's internet regulator, the Cyberspace Administration of China (CAC), has approved the launch of Apple Intelligence in the Chinese market based on a partnership with Alibaba to integrate the Qwen model into the company's operating systems, including iOS, iPadOS, macOS, and visionOS.
Baidu has also confirmed that it is working with Apple on developing AI features for Chinese users. These two partnerships represent a strategic shift for the Cupertino company in a market where delays in launching AI features were beginning to cost market share.
Apple Intelligence debuted globally in 2024 but was excluded from China due to a lack of regulatory approval. The country requires generative AI models to undergo review by the CAC before being offered to the public, which created a deadlock for Apple. Unlike markets such as the United States and Europe, where the company uses its own models and integrations with OpenAI, in China it was necessary to find local partners who already had regulatory approval.
The numbers explain the urgency. In the second quarter, Apple generated $20.5 billion in revenue in Greater China, a 28% increase compared to the previous year. The company also reclaimed the second position in the Chinese smartphone market after a shopping festival that offered aggressive discounts on the iPhone line. Losing ground in AI in this market would mean ceding space to rivals like Huawei and Xiaomi, who already integrate generative AI features into their devices.
The Qwen model, developed by Alibaba's cloud division, will be integrated into "Apple Intelligence experiences," according to a statement from Alibaba itself. The features include text and image understanding and generation, the pillars of generative AI applied to mobile devices. A specific timeline for the launch has not been disclosed.
For Alibaba, the agreement is equally significant. The company has been heavily investing in Qwen as a competitive alternative in the ecosystem of large Chinese language models, competing with Baidu, ByteDance, and the emerging DeepSeek. Having Qwen as the default engine for Apple Intelligence on hundreds of millions of iPhones sold in China is a distribution channel that no competitor has achieved so far. As we analyzed in our coverage of the technology sector, the race for distribution is as important as the race for technical capability in the AI market.
Baidu's participation adds an extra layer. Although the details of the collaboration are less clear, the official confirmation indicates that Apple may adopt a multi-supplier approach in China, just as it does in the West by combining its own models with third-party integrations.
Regulatory approval is not just a technical matter. It signals a moment of relative openness from the Chinese government for partnerships with American big techs in the field of AI, as long as the models used are from local companies. It is a formula that protects Chinese technological sovereignty while allowing the entry of foreign platforms.
However, there are signs that Apple wants to diversify even further. Reports indicate that the company is exploring integrations with DeepSeek, whose open-source model gained enormous global traction in early 2025, and with ByteDance, the owner of TikTok and the Doubao model. This multi-partner strategy reduces dependence on a single supplier and increases Apple's negotiating power. It is a pattern that the company already applies in its hardware supply chain, as we detailed in previous analyses of Apple's industrial strategy.
For investors, the move has direct implications. China accounts for nearly 20% of Apple's global revenue. A successful adoption of Apple Intelligence in the country could reflect in faster device upgrade cycles, as AI features require the latest chips from Apple's A and M lines. We frequently analyze how technological decisions impact the financial market, and this is a classic case.
The entry of Apple Intelligence into China consolidates a model that could be replicated in other markets with restrictive regulations: partnerships with local AI champions as a way to circumvent regulatory barriers. India, Southeast Asian countries, and even the European Union may see similar arrangements in the coming quarters.
The Chinese generative AI market already moves tens of billions of dollars and grows at rates exceeding 30% per year, according to estimates from industry consultancies. Alibaba, with Qwen now embedded in iPhones, gains instant scale. Baidu, which already leads in searches and autonomous vehicles in China, adds another distribution channel for its models.
For Apple, the calculation is simple: without integrated generative AI, the iPhone loses relevance against Android competitors that already offer these features in China. With Apple Intelligence approved, the company can finally compete on more balanced terms in the world's second-largest smartphone market. The delay of over a year, however, is a reminder that even the largest technology company on the planet must adapt to local rules when geopolitics comes into play.
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