Shares of Chinese tech giant Alibaba (BABA -1.71%) rallied 8.1% on Tuesday.
Alibaba is not only a leader in e-commerce and digital payments but also an artificial intelligence (AI) leader in China. Its open-source model Qwen is thought to be among the best open-source models out there, ranking close to or above the latest DeepSeek on independent scoring boards such as Live Bench.
Therefore, Alibaba rose today after AI chip giant Nvidia (NVDA -0.23%) suggested it would be able to recommence shipping its H20 AI chips to China once again after an April ban.
Nvidia assured investors it has assurances from the White House
Late on Monday, Nvidia wrote on its company blog that "NVIDIA is filing applications to sell the NVIDIA H20 GPU again. The U.S. government has assured NVIDIA that licenses will be granted, and NVIDIA hopes to start deliveries soon."
In April, Nvidia was forced to stop shipments of its H20, which is a modified version of its Hopper AI chips to fit the Chinese market, and to apply for a license. Whether that halt had to do with the administration's negotiations with China over trade policy or not is unclear. After all, those trade negotiations are still ongoing.
Nevetheless, Nvidia's announcement boosted virtually all Chinese AI companies. Alibaba certainly fits that mold, with its Qwen open-source model being one of the best-performing models in China. Last month, Qwen's latest model leapt to the top of the Hugging Face leaderboard as the highest-performing open-source model today.
In addition to Qwen, Alibaba has also invested in an AI start-up named Moonshot. Moonshot just released its Kimi K2 AI model, which Kimi management claims tops the best ChatGPT models from OpenAI and Anthropic's Claude models in the specific task of software coding and at a fraction of the cost.

Image source: Getty Images.
Alibaba should rank among the top of China's AI companies
It remains to be seen how China's AI companies will be able to compete against their U.S. counterparts, but that may not matter much in the case of Alibaba's stock, which revolves around its core China e-commerce business. As long as Alibaba has access to top AI chips and talent versus its competitors, it should be able to translate that into revenue and profit growth across its business empire spanning e-commerce, cloud, and digital finance.