China’s AI-led stock rally is far from a bubble, as the country’s technology companies still have room to expand valuations and profits through their focus on applications, according to Goldman Sachs’ chief China equity strategist.
China’s approach of investing more capital in AI applications, as opposed to the US strategy of focusing on computing power, gave investors “reassurance that its ability to monetize AI could be better, at least in the short term,” Kinger Lau said in an interview on Thursday.
“The key question is how companies monetize the demand for AI-related products,” he said. “Compared to the United States, Chinese app-focused companies are still trading at much more reasonable valuations.”
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His comments come amid growing jitters about a global AI bubble, with stocks soaring and big investments seemingly ahead of fundamentals. Optimism around China’s rise as an AI superpower has intensified since startup DeepSeek introduced efficient low-cost models and big tech companies launched new AI tools.
Kinger Lau, chief China equity strategist at Goldman Sachs. Photo: Dickson Lee alt=Kinger Lau, chief China equity strategist at Goldman Sachs. Photo: Dickson Lee>
“The rise of AI stocks in China is far from a bubble from a valuation perspective,” Lau said. China’s top 10 tech companies have a combined market capitalization of $2.5 trillion, while their American counterparts have a market capitalization of $25 trillion, a difference ten times larger. These U.S. companies also account for about 40 percent of the S&P 500’s market capitalization, while their Chinese peers account for about 15 percent of the broader group.
“The story of AI will unfold in China,” Lau said. “The AI ​​investment cycle, which is about 18 months behind that of the US, has more room to grow and translate into profit and revenue growth.”
The issue was also a key focus of China’s latest five-year plan, the country’s main economic and social roadmap, which met 90 percent of its growth and development goals in the last five plans, according to Goldman Sachs research.
“China’s bull market will extend, but the pace of the rise will likely moderate, as next year’s driver shifts from multiple expansion to earnings recovery,” Lau said.