The TikTok owner is throwing more money at AI than most of Silicon Valley. ByteDance just raised its 2026 AI spend by at least 25%.
The new plan is over 200 billion yuan, or about $30 billion. A bigger slice is now headed to Chinese chip makers.
Why The Bump Now
ByteDance had penciled in 160 billion yuan late last year. That is for AI capex, which means money spent on long-term gear like servers and chips.
Two people told the South China Morning Post the new number is over 200 billion yuan. Memory chip prices are also up across the field.
Memory chips hold data while a computer is using it. Prices have run up as AI labs buy more.
The bigger ByteDance gets in AI, the more memory it needs. The Doubao chatbot, video tools, and feed sorters all run on the same hardware.
Doubao is one of China's most-used chatbots. ByteDance is also pouring more into video AI tools.
Chinese cloud players like Alibaba (BABA), Tencent, and Baidu (BIDU) made similar moves over the past year. They have all leaned more on Chinese silicon as U.S. trade rules tightened.
The mid-year bump shows just how fast AI cost lines are moving. Most U.S. cloud names had to lift their views too in their last earnings call.
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The Domestic Chip Tilt
ByteDance is steering a bigger share of the budget toward Chinese chips. That is now standard practice across China's tech giants.
It helps them hedge the risk from U.S. trade rules. It also follows Beijing's push to use more local chips.
Washington has cleared Nvidia (NVDA) to sell its H200 chips into China. But Beijing has not yet given local firms the green light to import them.
Until that flips, Chinese AI buyers are stuck shopping closer to home. That sends more orders to local chip designers and to foundries like SMIC.
What To Watch
ByteDance's $30 billion lines up with the AI capex budgets at U.S. cloud giants like Microsoft (MSFT) and Meta (META). A 25% mid-year bump from one of China's biggest spenders tells buyers two things at once.
AI hardware demand is not cooling. And the wedge between U.S. and Chinese supply chains keeps growing.
Buyers tracking memory makers and Chinese foundries get a fresh data point. The same goes for U.S. chip names with China sales on the line.
Memory makers like Micron (MU) and SK Hynix could see more pricing power. That tends to lift their stocks.
The same logic flows to Chinese chip names like SMIC. They get more demand as ByteDance and its peers buy local.
For now, the message from ByteDance is plain. AI spending is going up, not down.
That holds on both sides of the Pacific.
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