Skip to main content
AI in Asia
3 Before 9: April 14, 2026
3 Before 9

Monday, 13 April 2026

3 Before 9: April 14, 2026

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

Listen to today's 3 Before 9

Who should pay attention

Chip manufacturers | Semiconductor investors | Governments | APAC tech buyers

What changes next

Asia-Pacific AI governance frameworks diverge as Hong Kong, Singapore and Tokyo jostle for regional influence.

1

Japan Pours Another $4 Billion Into Rapidus In High-Stakes AI Chip Bet

Tokyo has approved ¥631.5 billion (around $4 billion) in fresh subsidies for Rapidus, lifting total public backing for the fledgling foundry to roughly ¥2.6 trillion ($16.3 billion) by the end of fiscal 2026. The money is earmarked to underwrite Rapidus's first commercial contract, a 2-nanometer order from Fujitsu, after an external committee signed off on the company's progress at its Hokkaido fab. Rapidus still aims to hit pilot production late this year and reach a 2031 IPO, but it trails TSMC by several generations and is now also competing for engineering talent with Elon Musk's new Intel-partnered Terafab venture.

Why it matters for Asia

Japan is effectively betting the bank that a domestic 2nm foundry is essential national infrastructure, not a private gamble. For Asia-Pacific buyers, this tips the odds that a second credible advanced-node supplier emerges outside Taiwan within the decade, easing the supply-chain concentration risk that boards in Singapore, Seoul and Sydney have been flagging since 2024. It also signals to Southeast Asian governments that very large state capital, not tax incentives alone, is now the price of entry for sovereign AI capacity.^

Read the full story
2

Stanford's 2026 AI Index Declares The US-China Performance Gap All But Closed

The Stanford HAI 2026 AI Index, published yesterday, finds Chinese and American frontier models have swapped the top slot on leaderboards repeatedly since early 2025, with the best US model ahead by just 2.7 percent as of March. China leads on publication volume, citations, patents and industrial-robot installs, while the US keeps an edge on top-tier flagship models and private investment, which at $285.9 billion last year was 23 times China's reported $12.4 billion. The report credits China's open-source push, led by DeepSeek, Qwen and Zhipu, for the rapid catch-up.

Why it matters for Asia

For enterprises across Asia, the takeaway is that dual-stack AI strategies are no longer a hedge, they are the default. Procurement teams in Japan, Korea and ASEAN can credibly plan to run open-weight Chinese models for cost-sensitive workloads alongside US frontier models for regulated use cases, and expect comparable quality. Expect regional cloud providers and systems integrators to accelerate multi-model reference architectures this quarter.^

Read the full story
3

Hong Kong Opens World Internet Conference Asia-Pacific Summit With AI Governance Front And Centre

The 2026 World Internet Conference Asia-Pacific Summit opened in Hong Kong on Sunday, running two days at the Hong Kong Convention and Exhibition Centre under the theme of digital and intelligent empowerment. Six sub-forums today cover AI agents, AI security and governance, digital finance, digital health, AI for social good, and digital transformation, with IT ministers from Samoa, Madagascar, Turkmenistan and Burundi on the speaker roster alongside the GSMA chief executive and the Chairman of the International AI Governance Association. Organisers plan to release three reports covering AI for public welfare, digital finance and AI governance before the summit closes.

Why it matters for Asia

Hong Kong is positioning itself as the neutral convening ground for AI rules in Asia, at a moment when Singapore, Seoul and Tokyo are each pushing their own frameworks. For enterprise buyers and policy teams, the sub-forum outputs and the three reports will shape the next round of procurement and compliance language for cross-border AI deployments in the region, particularly for firms selling into mainland China through Hong Kong entities.^

Read the full story

That's today's 3 Before 9.

Explore more at AI in Asia or share signals with us.

Recent Editions

View all

Sunday

26 April 2026

  • 1. Sony AI's Project Ace becomes the first robot to beat elite and pro table tennis players, published on the cover of Nature.
  • 2. Geely, AFARI Technology and CaoCao Mobility debut China's first purpose-built robotaxi - the EVA Cab - at Auto China 2026, with commercial launch slated for 2027.
  • 3. Taiwan and South Korea leapfrog the UK in global equity rankings as the AI chip rally lifts TSMC, Samsung and SK Hynix to structurally larger weight.
Read edition

Sunday

26 April 2026

  • 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.
  • 2. Tencent launched Hy3 Preview, a 295B-parameter MoE model, and swapped DeepSeek out of its Yuanbao chatbot in favour of the new in-house technology.
  • 3. Nissan committed to fitting AI-driven Level 2-plus hands-free driving from UK startup Wayve into 90 per cent of its future vehicle line-up.
Read edition

Friday

24 April 2026

  • 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.
  • 2. SoftBank is seeking a $10 billion two-year margin loan collateralised by its OpenAI stake, pushing its total commitment to the ChatGPT maker to about $64.6 billion.
  • 3. TSMC unveiled A13, a 1.3nm-class shrink of A14 aimed at AI accelerators, with production slated for 2029 alongside a 1.2nm A12 variant, while A16 slips to 2027.
Read edition

Thursday

23 April 2026

  • 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.
  • 2. SK Hynix posts a record 72 per cent operating margin and US$27 billion quarterly profit as HBM demand keeps Asia's memory duopoly in the driver's seat.
  • 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.
Read edition

Wednesday

22 April 2026

  • 1. LINE Yahoo launched Agent i on 20 April, a single AI agent now embedded in both the LINE app's 100m-plus user base and Yahoo! JAPAN, with enterprise and no-code versions due over the summer.
  • 2. SoftBank named Arm CEO Rene Haas to also run SoftBank Group International from 21 April, tightening coordination across the group's overseas chip and AI bets including Arm, OpenAI, Stargate and Project Crystal Land.
  • 3. Meta's $2 billion acquisition of Singapore-based Chinese AI start-up Manus is still under Beijing's national-security review, with co-founders barred from leaving China and the 'Singapore washing' route for China AI firms now under serious pressure.
Read edition

Tuesday

21 April 2026

  • 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.
  • 2. Chinese humanoid robot makers shipped roughly 90 per cent of global units in 2025 but still trade at a valuation discount to pre-production US rivals.
  • 3. Volkswagen confirmed its China cars will ship with an on-device AI voice agent from H2 2026, built on tech from Tencent, Alibaba and Baidu.
Read edition