Chinese tech giants race to create the 'everything app' of the future
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NANJING, CHINA – NOVEMBER 25: Captured from above, the Alibaba Jiangsu Headquarters illuminates the night on November 25, 2025, in Nanjing, Jiangsu Province of China. (Photo by Fang Dongxu/VCG via Getty Images)

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China’s tech titans are pushing into the next frontier of the artificial intelligence landscape, known as ‘agentic commerce.’ Leading companies like Alibaba and ByteDance are at the forefront, striving to transform chatbots into sophisticated platforms that can handle complete shopping and payment transactions.

In a significant move last week, Alibaba enhanced its Qwen AI chatbot, enabling it to facilitate transactions directly within its interface. This means users can now order meals or book flights seamlessly, without stepping out of the chat environment.

The recent upgrade integrates Qwen with Alibaba’s expansive e-commerce network. Users are now able to access personalized product suggestions from Alibaba’s platforms, such as Taobao or the travel service Fliggy, and finalize their purchases via Alipay, all within the chatbot’s confines.

Prior to this development, Qwen was limited to offering recommendations based on user input, requiring users to navigate through multiple platforms to complete their shopping journeys.

The update reflects a broader shift among some global artificial intelligence firms from a focus on foundational AI models to “agentic AI”, which performs tasks on behalf of users with limited supervision.

“The agentic transformation of commercial services enables the maximal integration of user services [and] enhances user stickiness,” Shaochen Wang, a research analyst at Counterpoint Research, referring to stronger long-term user engagement.

That allows companies to build a sustainable competitive advantage, often called a business moat, which helps protect profits from competitors, he added.

While commercial applications for agentic AI are expected to range from autonomous driving to cybersecurity, e-commerce is emerging as one of its earliest and most pervasive use cases, with payment and tech giants in the U.S. also rolling out their first iterations in recent months.

Within China, Alibaba is well-positioned to be a pioneer in agentic commerce due to its advanced large language model capabilities and its extensive e-commerce network covering clothing, food, housing, and transportation, Wang said.

Growing global competition

Alibaba’s strategy could help it compete with rival super apps such as Tencent’s WeChat — widely regarded as China’s leading ‘super app’ — which combines messaging, payments, e-commerce and other services into a single platform used by over 1 billion users.

Other Chinese firms are also moving quickly.

ByteDance in December upgraded its popular Doubao AI chatbot to autonomously handle tasks such as ticket bookings through integrations with e-commerce features on Douyin, the Chinese version of TikTok.

The upgraded Doubao model was introduced on a prototype smartphone developed by ZTE Corp as a comprehensive AI assistant capable of performing tasks across a user’s mobile device. However, some of Doubao’s planned features were later scaled back after rivals raised privacy and security concerns.

Meanwhile, Tencent President Martin Lau said during the company’s May 2025 earnings call that AI agents could become core components of the WeChat ecosystem. 

“AI agents will be foundational to the evolution of super apps, with success depending on deep integration across payments, logistics, and social engagement,” Charlie Dai, VP and principal analyst at Forrester, told CNBC.

While Chinese firms like Alibaba, Tencent and ByteDance will compete to embed agents across their platforms, they all benefit from integrated ecosystems, rich behavioral data, and consumer familiarity with super apps, said Dai.

Western companies, while leading in foundational AI models and global reach, face more fragmented data and stricter privacy regulations, slowing cross-service integration, he added.

U.S. players pursuing agentic commerce include OpenAI, Perplexity, and Amazon. Google is also exploring ways to position itself as a “matchmaker” between merchants, consumers and AI agents.

“China will prioritize domestic integration and strategic expansion in selected regions, while U.S. firms focus on global scalability and governance,” Dai noted.

Approximately half of all consumers already use AI when searching online, according to a 2025 McKinsey study.

The report estimated that AI agents could generate more than $1 trillion in economic value for U.S. businesses by 2030 by streamlining important yet routine steps in consumer decision-making.

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