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AI in Asia
3 Before 9
3 Before 9

Wednesday, 25 March 2026

3 Before 9

3 daily AI stories and 1 bold opinion before your 9am kopi

Listen to today's 3 Before 9

Who should pay attention

AI leaders, founders, enterprise decision-makers, and teams deploying AI across Asia.

What changes next

Regulatory expectations tighten, infrastructure buildout accelerates, and enterprise AI governance matures.

1

Broadcom Warns TSMC Has Hit Capacity Limits as AI Chip Demand Outstrips Supply

Broadcom flagged on Monday that manufacturing partner TSMC is running at full stretch, with AI chip demand now roughly three times above available supply. The constraint extends well beyond silicon – lead times for PCBs used in optical transceivers have ballooned from six weeks to as long as six months, and laser component suppliers are similarly squeezed. Customers across the semiconductor supply chain are locking in three-to-five-year agreements to secure future capacity, with Samsung confirming it has shifted to longer-term contracts with major buyers. The bottleneck is expected to persist into 2027 at the earliest.

Why it matters for Asia

Taiwan sits at the dead centre of this crunch. TSMC fabricates the vast majority of advanced AI chips powering everything from hyperscaler data centres to enterprise inference workloads, and any capacity ceiling directly constrains how fast companies across Asia Pacific can scale their AI infrastructure. For enterprise buyers in the region planning GPU-heavy deployments, the message is blunt – secure your supply now or wait.

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2

DJI Spin-off ZYT Claims Its Self-driving AI Can Outperform Its Own CEO on Shenzhen Streets

Shenzhen-based ZYT, the autonomous driving unit spun out of drone giant DJI, says its new "mobility foundation model" already drives better than CEO Shen Shaojie in live traffic, including navigating narrow roads with oncoming vehicles and children near schools. Unlike conventional self-driving systems that rely on dedicated modules for detecting specific objects, ZYT's model trains on video from drones, robots, vacuum cleaners, and motorcycles to teach itself how to drive from first principles. The company has signed deals with three major Chinese truck makers – XCMG, SHACMAN, and SINOTRUK – for highway-based autonomous lorry systems entering mass production in the first half of this year, and is targeting a Hong Kong IPO as early as 2027.

Why it matters for Asia

ZYT represents a distinctly Chinese approach to autonomous driving – cheaper to train, faster to deploy across vehicle types, and backed by state capital after FAW Group's recent investment. With mass production of commercial truck systems starting now and a Hong Kong listing on the horizon, the company is positioning itself as a serious alternative to Waymo and other Western players for buyers across Southeast Asia's fast-growing logistics sector.

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3

AI EXPO Taiwan 2026 Opens Today With 50,000 Expected and Every Major Cloud Provider on the Floor

AI EXPO Taiwan 2026 opens this morning at Taipei Expo Park for a three-day run under the banner "AI·X: Cross-Domain X Infinite Possibilities". The event, co-organised by DIGITIMES and Taiwan's National Development Council, spans three exhibition zones – AI Infra covering chips, edge computing, and data centre hardware; AI Convergence showcasing real-world deployments in manufacturing, healthcare, finance, and urban governance; and AI Next spotlighting generative AI, autonomous agents, quantum computing, and robotics. AWS, Google Cloud, Nvidia, AMD, IBM, Microsoft, Oracle, Lenovo, and ASUS are among the exhibitors, and more than 50,000 industry decision-makers are expected through the doors.

Why it matters for Asia

Taiwan's role in the global AI stack goes well beyond chip fabrication, and this event is the island's annual proof point. With sovereign AI and scalable enterprise deployment as central themes, the expo is where Asian buyers come to see which infrastructure and platform bets are ready for production. The exhibitor roster reads like a procurement shortlist for any CTO in the region planning their 2026 AI buildout.

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That's today's 3 Before 9.

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Sunday

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  • 1. Sarvam AI is closing a $300-350M Series B at a $1.5B valuation led by Bessemer with Nvidia, Amazon and HCLTech, India's first major sovereign-AI unicorn round.
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Friday

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  • 1. DeepSeek launches V4-Pro and V4-Flash with a 1-million-token context window, running on Huawei's new Ascend 950 supernode clusters and priced at roughly a tenth of OpenAI's output-token rate.
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Thursday

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  • 1. Microsoft pledges A$25 billion (US$17.9 billion) to make Australia its largest AI infrastructure hub, including skills training for three million workers.
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  • 3. Japan's Nikkei 225 breaches 60,000 for the first time, but only 17 per cent of Tokyo stocks rose on the day, exposing a dangerously narrow AI-driven rally.
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Tuesday

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  • 1. Qualcomm CEO Cristiano Amon met Samsung and SK Hynix executives in Seoul to pitch 2nm wafer orders and lock in memory supply for Snapdragon and AI platforms.
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