ByteDance in talks with China's Iluvatar CoreX to purchase AI chips

ByteDance in talks with China's Iluvatar CoreX to purchase AI chips
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Summary ByteDance is reportedly in talks to buy AI chips from Iluvatar CoreX and may also use Baidu’s Kunlunxin chips, highlighting growing adoption of Chinese-made AI hardware.

BEIJING (Reuters) - Chinese technology company ByteDance is in talks with Shanghai-based Iluvatar ‌CoreX (9903.HK) to purchase AI chips for inference work and is also considering a similar deal with Baidu (9888.HK), according to two sources familiar with the matter.

If a deal is agreed, Iluvatar CoreX would become ByteDance's third major domestic supplier of graphics processing units (GPUs) after Huawei and Cambricon (688256.SS), the sources ​added.

TikTok parent ByteDance is also considering using Baidu's (9888.HK) Kunlunxin chips, they said, declining to be named as the talks ​are not public. Tencent (0700.HK) is already a Kunlunxin chip customer, according to one of the sources.

ByteDance, ⁠Iluvatar CoreX, Baidu and Tencent did not respond to requests for comment.

The potential deals demonstrate that efforts by Chinese chipmakers to ​offer alternatives to foreign AI chips are gaining traction as Beijing promotes the use of locally developed chips to improve self-reliance ​amid U.S. export controls on advanced chips.

Chinese GPU and AI chipmakers captured nearly 41% of China's AI accelerator server market last year, eroding Nvidia's (NVDA.O) once-dominant position in one of its most important overseas markets, Reuters reported in April.

While Nvidia's market share in China has effectively fallen to zero, according to its ​CEO Jensen Huang, Chinese AI chips would become available in large quantities in the second half of this year, Tencent's ​Chief Strategy Officer James Mitchell said in May.

Iluvatar CoreX, one of China's leading GPU startups, is expected to ship at least 50,000 chips to ‌ByteDance ⁠this year and most of them will be used for inference workloads, as ByteDance expands the customer base for its signature AI chatbot Doubao, the sources said.

Inference workloads involve answering queries and are different from AI model training, which tends to use the most powerful chips.

The details of the potential deals are not final and still subject to change, the sources said.

COMMERCIAL MILESTONE

A deal ​with ByteDance, one of China's biggest technology ​companies and a major ⁠spender on AI infrastructure, would be a significant commercial milestone for Iluvatar CoreX. Until now, the Shanghai-based company has mainly supplied government procurement projects, one of the sources said.

Iluvatar CoreX, which listed in ​Hong Kong in January, reported 1 billion yuan ($148 million) in 2025 revenue, about 90% from selling ​GPUs, as it ⁠benefited from growing demand for domestic AI hardware.

Its Tiangai series chips are tailored for AI training, while its Zhikai series is geared toward inference tasks, according to its website.

Iluvatar CoreX's revenue is projected to reach 3.04 billion yuan ($449.8 million) this year, with total shipments expected ⁠to jump ​139% to over 100,000 chips, according to a Huatai Securities research note. ​The broker estimated the Zhikai inference chips had an average selling price of 12,000 yuan, or about $1,775 each.

Iluvatar Corex shares rose 12% in Hong Kong following ​the Reuters report.

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