Baidu ekes out modest quarterly revenue growth amid escalating generative AI competition in China

Net income came in at 5.4 billion yuan for the period, a 6 per cent fall from 5.8 billion yuan a year ago, beating analysts’ estimates of 3.97 billion yuan.

Robin Li Yanhong, CEO of Baidu. Photo: EPA-EFE

“As a new era of [generative AI] unfolds in China, foundation models like Ernie will serve as the underlying infrastructure, infusing various facets of people’s lives,” Robin Li Yanhong, co-founder, chairman and CEO of Baidu, said in a statement, referring to the firm’s large language model (LLM).

Li added that Baidu is working to make its Ernie family of models affordable and efficient for the market. “This should provide Baidu with even greater opportunities ahead,” he said.

Baidu’s shares fell less than 1 per cent to close at HK$108.4 ahead of the earnings release on Thursday.

The company has pinned high hopes on generative AI as a major future growth engine. Ernie Bot, which debuted in March last year as the firm’s answer to OpenAI’s ChatGPT, drew over 200 million users just 13 months after its launch, with enterprise client numbers exceeding 85,000, Li said in April.
The fourth and latest version of the Ernie LLM, unveiled by Baidu last October, was described by Li as comparable to GPT-4, OpenAI’s most advanced model available to the public.

As part of moves to monetise its AI products, Baidu introduced three tools based on Ernie to help developers build applications, AI agents and models, in some cases without the need to know how to code.

That followed the company’s launch in November of a paid version of Ernie 4.0 for 59.9 yuan per month.

Baidu faces intense competition from other AI players in China. While ChatGPT and similar services from Google are officially unavailable in the country, Chinese firms and institutions have developed more than 200 LLMs, according to estimates by the government.

This week, TikTok owner ByteDance launched a batch of LLMs that costs less for users than those from rivals, a move that could spark a new price war, while video gaming and social media giant Tencent Holdings added to text-to-image capability its open-source LLM.