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AI in Asia
Friday, 24 April 2026

3 Before 9

3 must-know AI stories before your 9am coffee

Who should pay attention

Enterprise leaders | Developers | Founders | Policymakers

What changes next

Asian enterprises can now procure frontier AI from Chinese labs at a fraction of US cloud prices, but the capital and advanced-node silicon that finance the buildout still flow through Taipei, Tokyo and a handful of American platforms, making this week's SoftBank leverage and TSMC roadmap the real stress tests for the region.

1

DeepSeek Launches V4 With Huawei Ascend Chips, Cutting Prices To A Fraction Of OpenAI

Chinese AI lab DeepSeek released preview versions of its V4-Pro and V4-Flash models on Friday, with the flagship Pro variant carrying 1.6 trillion total parameters, 49 billion active, a 1-million-token context window and open-source weights on Hugging Face. The lab partnered with Huawei, whose Ascend supernode clusters built on the new 950 chips will run V4 at scale in the second half of the year, marking a decisive pivot away from the Nvidia hardware that powered V3 and R1. DeepSeek priced V4-Pro at $3.48 per million output tokens against OpenAI's $30 and Anthropic's $25, with V4-Flash at just $0.28 per million.

Why it matters for Asia

The V4 launch is the clearest signal yet that China's AI stack, model plus silicon, is now a coherent alternative rather than a lagging copy. For enterprise buyers across Asia, it reframes the procurement calculus - sovereign deployments on Huawei hardware running best-in-class open weights become viable in Singapore, Jakarta and Riyadh, where export controls or data residency rules had made US cloud AI awkward. Expect a fresh round of price compression from Alibaba, Tencent and Baidu within weeks. Read more: [CNBC](https://www.cnbc.com/2026/04/24/deepseek-v4-llm-preview-open-source-ai-competition-china.html)

2

SoftBank Pledges OpenAI Shares As Collateral For A $10 Billion Margin Loan

Japan's SoftBank Group is seeking a two-year margin loan of $10 billion backed by its growing stake in OpenAI, with an option to extend by a third year. Masayoshi Son has now committed roughly $64.6 billion to the ChatGPT maker through Vision Fund 2 and a $40 billion primary round earlier this year, pushing SoftBank's OpenAI holding to about 13 per cent. The new facility would unlock fresh liquidity without forcing sales of Arm or telecom assets, but leaves the group more exposed to a single private tech valuation than at any point in its history.

Why it matters for Asia

SoftBank is once again the largest AI bet in Asia, and its balance sheet is now functionally a leveraged OpenAI proxy. For Japanese banks, Tokyo-listed AI names and the broader regional market, that concentration cuts both ways - upside if OpenAI re-rates higher into an IPO, margin calls and forced selling across SoftBank's portfolio if the valuation slips. Regional capital allocators should watch the loan covenants closely; they will shape whether the next AI sell-off is amplified or absorbed across Asia Pacific equities. Read more: [Yahoo Finance](https://finance.yahoo.com/sectors/technology/articles/softbank-seeks-10-billion-loan-133558375.html)

3

TSMC Maps A13 And 1.3nm-Class Nodes For AI Accelerators In 2029

At its North America Technology Symposium this week, TSMC unveiled A13, a direct shrink of last year's A14 node that delivers a further 6 per cent area reduction on nanosheet transistors and is aimed squarely at AI accelerators and high-end CPUs. The Taiwan foundry confirmed A13 will enter production in 2029 alongside a 1.2nm-class A12 variant, and said the whole roadmap will proceed without the delayed High-NA EUV tooling. A16, the promised 1.6nm node with backside power delivery, slips to 2027 volume production.

Why it matters for Asia

TSMC's process roadmap is the metronome for every hyperscaler's AI silicon plan, and a confirmed A13 path to 2029 anchors capex decisions from Nvidia, Broadcom and AMD, as well as Asian customers MediaTek and Alchip. For policymakers in Taipei, Tokyo and Seoul the message is that Taiwan's lead at the bleeding edge is not closing, which makes Rapidus's two-nanometre ambitions and Samsung's foundry fight harder, and the regional concentration of advanced-node supply more acute. Read more: [Radio Taiwan International](https://www.rti.org.tw/en/news?uid=3&pid=204569) ## THE AI IN ASIA VIEW Today's trio reads as one story told in three registers: compute, capital and silicon. DeepSeek plus Huawei shows that a full Chinese AI stack is now price-competitive and globally deployable. SoftBank's margin loan shows that Japan's largest AI bet is now intensely leveraged to a single American private valuation. TSMC's A13 roadmap, pushed to 2029 without High-NA EUV, confirms that Taiwan still controls the underlying physics of the race. For the region the strategic picture is unusually clear. Asian enterprises can now procure frontier AI from Chinese labs at a tenth of US prices, but the advanced-node chips and capital that finance the broader buildout still flow through Taipei, Tokyo and a handful of American platforms. Capital allocators should treat this week's SoftBank headlines as a stress test on that concentration, and as a reminder that AI exposure in Asia is no longer a factor bet - it is the market.

That's today's 3 Before 9.

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