China's internet regulator greenlights Apple Intelligence for iPhones, with Alibaba's Qwen model handling the heavy lifting and Baidu providing additional AI support
China just gave Apple the green light to bring its AI features to iPhones in the country. The Cyberspace Administration of China approved Apple Intelligence for iPhones on July 15, 2026, ending a regulatory process that stretched on for roughly two years. Alibaba’s ADRs jumped as much as 7.9% on the news, hitting multi-year highs, while Baidu’s ADRs climbed up to 4%.
What Apple is actually building in China #
In the US, Apple leans on partnerships with Google and OpenAI to power its AI features. In China, the China-specific version of Apple Intelligence runs on Alibaba’s Qwen large-language model for text and image generation. Baidu fills in the gaps, providing additional AI development support for specific features.
Alibaba’s Joe Tsai confirmed the partnership back in February 2025. Under Chinese law, all generative AI services must secure a license from the CAC prior to public deployment, necessitating local partnerships for foreign companies.
Why this matters beyond tech stocks #
For Alibaba, being selected as the core AI engine for Apple Intelligence in China is a credibility stamp that positions Alibaba’s cloud and AI division as a serious competitor in the large-language model space. Baidu’s supporting role in Apple’s ecosystem gives it a recurring revenue stream and a high-profile reference customer. The approval also arrives as Apple gears up for the iPhone 18 launch cycle and seeks to regain market share lost to local competitors in China.
What crypto and macro investors should watch #
The surge in Alibaba and Baidu shares reflects a broader theme: investors are rotating capital toward companies with clear AI revenue pathways. The Alibaba ADR move of nearly 7.9% in a single session represents billions in market cap creation for a company of Alibaba’s size.
Apple’s decision to build a China-specific AI stack separate from its global one essentially creates two parallel AI ecosystems, with the Chinese version utilizing Alibaba and Baidu in place of Google and OpenAI.
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