Baidu Inc. (BIDU) isn't just China's search engine anymore. The company is making a serious run at becoming one of the country's top artificial intelligence chip makers, stepping into the vacuum created when U.S. export controls effectively kicked Nvidia Corp. (NVDA) out of the Chinese market for its best processors.
It's a fascinating transformation. Baidu once dominated Chinese search the way Google does everywhere else. Now it's pivoting hard into AI and autonomous driving, with semiconductors emerging as a critical piece of the puzzle. And analysts think the timing couldn't be better.
The Chip Strategy Taking Shape
The core of Baidu's semiconductor ambitions lives in Kunlunxin, its majority-owned chip subsidiary. According to CNBC, analysts have been upgrading their outlook on Baidu lately, pointing to rising semiconductor momentum and surging domestic demand for AI hardware.
Here's why this matters: U.S. restrictions have blocked Nvidia from selling its most powerful GPUs to China, and Beijing is actively discouraging Chinese companies from buying Nvidia's downgraded H20 chips. That creates a massive supply gap in a market where demand for AI computing power keeps climbing. Someone has to fill it.
Nick Patience from The Futurum Group told CNBC that Baidu's chip strategy is "both a necessity and an opportunity"—it solves Baidu's own supply problems while positioning the company as a critical AI hardware provider for China's broader tech ecosystem.
Baidu recently unveiled a five-year roadmap for its Kunlun chips, starting with the M100 launching in 2026 and the M300 arriving in 2027. The company already uses its own processors alongside Nvidia hardware to power its ERNIE AI models, and it's selling these chips to third-party data center builders while offering cloud compute capacity.
The Numbers Look Promising
The business is gaining real traction. Earlier this year, Kunlunxin secured orders from suppliers to China Mobile. Deutsche Bank called Kunlunxin a leading domestic AI chip developer, targeting large language model training, inference, cloud, and telecom workloads.
The financial projections are eye-popping. JPMorgan forecasts that Baidu's chip sales will surge sixfold to 8 billion yuan (about $1.1 billion) by 2026. Meanwhile, Macquarie values the entire Kunlun unit at roughly $28 billion. Those aren't small numbers for a business that's still ramping up.
China's chip shortage is accelerating this entire shift. Even giants like Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. (BABA) and Tencent Holding Ltd. (TCEHY) have flagged the tight supply of AI-grade semiconductors as a bottleneck for data center growth. With Huawei facing its own supply constraints, analysts expect Baidu to capture significant market share.
Restructuring Amid the Pivot
The transformation hasn't been entirely smooth. Baidu is cutting jobs across major divisions and reorganizing its AI teams to streamline operations after posting a loss-making quarter. According to the South China Morning Post, the company is also shifting leadership of its ERNIE AI model and chatbot to younger managers, aiming to boost competitiveness and accelerate innovation.
It's the classic challenge of reinventing yourself while still running the core business. Search advertising—Baidu's bread and butter—has been struggling, which explains some of the financial pressure.
Stock Performance and Recent Results
Despite the operational challenges, investors have been buying the AI story. Baidu stock has gained 38% year-to-date, driven by optimism over the company's shift toward AI—particularly its fast-growing AI Cloud business and Apollo Go autonomous driving operations.
On November 18, Baidu reported third-quarter results that showed revenue declining 7% to $4.38 billion, slightly ahead of the $4.31 billion analysts expected. Adjusted operating income took a harder hit, falling 69% to $310 million. But the quarterly adjusted earnings per share of $1.56 easily topped the analyst consensus estimate of $0.91.
The mixed results tell the story of a company in transition—traditional business under pressure, new ventures showing promise but not yet offsetting the decline.
What It Means
Baidu's chip ambitions represent a bet that China's AI ecosystem needs domestic semiconductor suppliers, and quickly. With Nvidia sidelined by export controls and Huawei struggling to meet demand, there's a real opening for a well-positioned player with deep AI expertise and existing cloud infrastructure.
Whether Baidu can execute on this opportunity remains to be seen. Building competitive AI chips is brutally difficult, and the company is restructuring while trying to scale a new business. But the demand is clearly there, and the early signs—customer orders, analyst upgrades, significant valuation projections—suggest Baidu might actually pull this off.
Baidu shares traded up 0.57% at $117.00 during Wednesday's premarket session.