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AI in Asia
3 Before 9: April 15, 2026
3 Before 9

Tuesday, 14 April 2026

3 Before 9: April 15, 2026

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

Listen to today's 3 Before 9

Who should pay attention

Manufacturers | Automakers | Logistics | Governments | AI Developers | Investors

What changes next

Competition in physical AI and robotics will intensify between Asian nations and Western counterparts.

1

SoftBank, Honda, Sony and NEC Form Joint Venture to Build Japan's Own Trillion-Parameter AI

Japan's largest technology companies have launched a joint venture to develop a trillion-parameter foundation model purpose-built for autonomous machines. SoftBank and NEC will handle AI development, Honda will be first to deploy the model in its autonomous vehicles, and Sony's contribution centres on robotics and gaming hardware. Preferred Networks, a Tokyo-based deep learning startup, is also involved. The Japanese government has pledged 1 trillion yen - roughly $6.7 billion - in support over five years, and Japan's biggest banks and steelmakers have taken equity stakes in the venture. Crucially, all training data and processing will remain in Japan, a deliberate move to end what industry leaders call a digital deficit created by years of sensitive operational data flowing into American cloud platforms.

Why it matters for Asia

This is Japan's most coordinated industrial AI bet in decades, and it signals a fundamental shift in how Asia's third-largest economy intends to compete. For enterprise buyers and developers across the region, the venture creates a credible non-US, non-China alternative for physical AI models - particularly relevant for manufacturers, automakers and logistics operators who have been wary of sending proprietary data offshore. Southeast Asian firms with deep Japanese supply chain ties should watch closely, as Honda and Sony deployments could pull regional partners into the ecosystem.^

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2

Spirit AI Raises $420 Million in 30 Days as Lei Jun and Jack Ma Back Embodied Intelligence

Chinese embodied AI startup Spirit AI has closed two funding rounds totalling RMB 3 billion (approximately $420 million) in just 30 days. The latest round of $140 million was co-led by Shunwei Capital and Yunfeng Fund - investment vehicles tied to Xiaomi founder Lei Jun and Alibaba co-founder Jack Ma respectively. The rare joint backing from two of China's most prominent tech billionaires underscores how seriously the country's investment establishment is taking the robotics-meets-AI opportunity. Spirit AI's open-source model Spirit v1.5 has outperformed competitors in zero-shot generalisation benchmarks, and the company has accumulated over 200,000 hours of robot interaction data with a target of one million hours by year end. Its robots already serve as baristas in JD Mall stores and handle battery pack insertion on CATL production lines with success rates above 99%.

Why it matters for Asia

The deal pushes Spirit AI's valuation past the 10 billion yuan mark and adds another heavyweight to China's fast-growing embodied AI sector, which is attracting capital at a pace that rivals the generative AI boom of 2023. For Asia-Pacific enterprise buyers evaluating robotics solutions, the message is clear - Chinese embodied AI companies are moving rapidly from lab demos to factory floors and retail environments. Companies across Southeast Asia sourcing from Chinese supply chains or operating in manufacturing should expect these systems to appear in their vendor ecosystems sooner than planned.^

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3

Global Funds Pour $7.9 Billion Into Asian AI Stocks as Geopolitical Tensions Ease

Foreign investors have ploughed a combined $7.9 billion into Taiwanese and South Korean equities in the past week, snapping more than a month of sustained outflows. Taiwan alone attracted $5.2 billion - on track for its third-largest weekly foreign purchase on record - while South Korea drew $2.7 billion. Japan separately pulled in around $12 billion in foreign inflows in the first week of April, driven largely by semiconductor-related stocks. The reversal follows a period of easing geopolitical tensions that had previously pushed global capital toward US safe havens, and reflects renewed confidence in Asia's position at the centre of global AI hardware supply chains.

Why it matters for Asia

The capital flows confirm what chipmakers in Taipei, Seoul and Tokyo have been arguing for months - that Asia's AI infrastructure advantage is structural, not cyclical. For enterprise technology buyers and investors across the region, the surge signals that global markets are pricing in sustained demand for the AI chips, memory and packaging that Asian manufacturers dominate. India, by contrast, saw $17.8 billion in outflows over 23 consecutive sessions, highlighting the premium the market now places on direct exposure to AI hardware value chains rather than broader emerging market growth.^

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That's today's 3 Before 9.

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