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Baidu's Sales Plummet Amidst Fierce AI War in China

Published 1 month ago4 minute read
David Isong
David Isong
Baidu's Sales Plummet Amidst Fierce AI War in China

Baidu Inc., a prominent Chinese internet search leader, experienced its most significant quarterly revenue decline in approximately three years, underscoring the impact of an economic downturn and intense market competition. In the June quarter, the company's revenue fell 4% to 32.7 billion yuan ($4.6 billion). This decline was primarily attributed to a slowdown in its core internet search operations and a challenging economic climate, which has curtailed its capacity to contend with larger artificial intelligence (AI) rivals and expand into new sectors. Despite the revenue contraction, Baidu reported a surprising 33% increase in net income, defying projections for a decline, a boost largely driven by long-term investments. Following these results, the company’s US shares experienced a 2% slide in pre-market trading.

Baidu's traditional mainstay, its internet search business, is facing considerable pressure and losing ground to popular social-video platforms like Xiaohongshu and Douyin (TikTok's Chinese counterpart). This shift in user engagement contributed to a 15% decline in online advertising revenue. However, not all segments struggled; the company's non-marketing revenue demonstrated resilience, growing a better-than-expected 34%, fueled by robust demand for its cloud unit, which has consistently shown double-digit sales growth in recent quarters.

A central pillar of Baidu's future growth strategy is its substantial investment in generative AI, particularly the Ernie chatbot. Baidu envisions Ernie as the foundation for an extensive AI ecosystem designed to bolster demand for its burgeoning cloud division. Despite this strategic pivot, the company's AI initiatives are navigating a highly competitive and crowded landscape in China. Baidu faces formidable rivals such as Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. and Tencent Holdings Ltd., both possessing greater financial firepower and more extensive global footprints. Additionally, the proliferation of open-sourced models like DeepSeek and Alibaba's Qwen, alongside a surge of AI-native applications, are encroaching on Baidu's turf. While Ernie was among the first chatbots to launch in China's vast internet market, it has since lost some ground to apps from ByteDance and Tencent, as well as various open-sourced alternatives. Chief Financial Officer Henry He acknowledged that AI search monetization is still in its very early stages and has yet to scale, leading to considerable near-term pressure on revenue and margins, with Q3 anticipated to be particularly challenging. He expressed potential for margin improvement as the core advertising business recovers and stabilizes. Co-founder Robin Li reiterated that while their AI transformation is rapidly advancing, it remains in its nascent phase, with significant room for optimization before reaching its full potential. In a strategic move to adapt, Baidu has abandoned its paid subscription model for Ernie and has open-sourced its proprietary Ernie models.

Beyond core AI development, Baidu is also accelerating its global expansion efforts for Apollo Go, its robotaxi service. Driverless rides through Apollo Go more than doubled in the June quarter, reaching 2.2 million, with cumulative rides surpassing 14 million by August. This autonomous driving venture is proving to be a promising avenue for AI commercialization. Baidu plans to introduce its fleet of self-driving robotaxis, already common in Chinese cities like Beijing, Guangzhou, and Wuhan, to Singapore and Malaysia as early as this year, and is currently conducting trials in Hong Kong, indicating a strong international push through partnerships with companies like Uber Technologies Inc. and Lyft Inc.

Furthermore, Baidu's Netflix-style subsidiary, iQiyi Inc., reported an 11% drop in revenue. The embattled streaming platform is reportedly seeking to raise $300 million for a listing in Hong Kong this year. Analysts from Bloomberg Intelligence predict a challenging future for Baidu, suggesting its AI ventures are likely to incur losses for at least the next three years, while its search-engine profit will remain under sustained pressure due to economic uncertainty in China's corporate sector and increasing competition from contemporary social media platforms. Despite these challenges, Baidu's stock price has risen approximately 6% this year, though it continues to trail its larger internet counterparts in a market buoyed by optimism for Chinese AI competitiveness.

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