Skip to main content

We use cookies to enhance your experience. By continuing to visit this site you agree to our use of cookies. Cookie Policy

AI in ASIA
Monday, 20 April 2026

3Before9

3 must-know AI stories before your 9am coffee

Who should pay attention

Enterprise AI buyers | Startup founders | Policy makers | Cloud providers | Compliance teams

What changes next

Expect AI governance to tighten across ASEAN as Vietnam's binding AI law sets the precedent for the region.

1

PwC Study Finds 74% of AI Value Captured by Just 20% of Companies

PwC released its 2026 AI Performance Study this week, surveying 1,217 senior executives across 25 sectors worldwide and finding that nearly three-quarters of AI's economic gains are flowing to roughly one-fifth of organisations. The leading companies share a common trait - they are using AI primarily to pursue growth rather than just cut costs. Growth-focused firms are two to three times as likely as their peers to deploy AI for identifying opportunities across industry boundaries, such as partnering with companies outside their core sector. The study found that efficiency-only strategies deliver diminishing returns, while companies combining AI with cross-sector expansion are pulling sharply ahead.

Why it matters for Asia

Singapore stands out in the data. Sixty-seven per cent of Singapore businesses say they are willing to take risks when investing in AI, compared with 41 per cent globally, and 43 per cent of Singapore respondents report using AI to compete with companies outside their own industry versus just 20 per cent worldwide. For enterprise buyers across Asia-Pacific, the message is clear - the AI advantage now belongs to companies chasing new revenue, not those trimming headcount, and Singapore-based firms appear to be betting accordingly.

Read more
2

Google Releases Gemma 4 Under Apache 2.0 With Frontier-Class Performance

Google DeepMind released Gemma 4 in early April, a family of four open-source models ranging from a compact 2B-parameter edge variant to a 31B dense model that currently ranks third on the Arena AI text leaderboard. All four models support native image and video processing, with the smaller variants also handling audio input for speech recognition. The 31B model runs entirely on a single 80GB Nvidia H100 GPU while matching or exceeding benchmarks set by proprietary models many times its size. The entire family ships under a fully permissive Apache 2.0 licence, meaning unrestricted commercial use, modification, and redistribution with no royalty obligations.

Why it matters for Asia

For Asian startups and enterprise teams that cannot afford frontier API pricing or prefer to keep data on-premises, Gemma 4 changes the calculus. A model that fits on one GPU, speaks multiple languages natively, and carries no licensing restrictions removes a major barrier for developers in markets like India, Indonesia, and Vietnam where cost sensitivity and data sovereignty concerns run high. Expect regional cloud providers across Southeast Asia and Japan to move quickly to offer hosted Gemma 4 instances as a competitive wedge against OpenAI and Anthropic.

Read more
3

Southeast Asia Leads World in AI Optimism While Governance Frameworks Lag Behind

Stanford University's 2026 AI Index Report and a new survey highlighted by TechWire Asia show that Southeast Asian populations are the most optimistic about AI anywhere in the world, but the region's governance infrastructure has not kept pace. In Malaysia, Thailand, Indonesia, and Singapore, more than 80 per cent of respondents say AI will profoundly change their lives within three to five years. Singapore leads all 30 surveyed countries at 81 per cent public trust in government AI regulation, followed by Indonesia at 76 per cent, Malaysia at 73 per cent, and Thailand at 70 per cent. Yet most ASEAN nations still rely on voluntary frameworks and soft-law guidance rather than binding AI-specific legislation, with Vietnam the sole exception after enacting an AI law in December 2025 that takes effect in phases from March 2026.

Why it matters for Asia

The gap between public enthusiasm and regulatory readiness creates both opportunity and risk for companies deploying AI across the region. Businesses moving fast in markets with minimal binding rules enjoy short-term flexibility, but face the prospect of retroactive compliance costs when hard regulation inevitably arrives. Vietnam's early move signals the direction of travel, and enterprise buyers building AI products for Southeast Asian markets should be stress-testing their governance playbooks now rather than waiting for each country to follow suit.

Read more

That's today's 3-Before-9.

Explore more at AIinASIA.com or share signals with us.

Get 3-Before-9 in your inbox

Three signals, every weekday, before 9am

Free forever. Unsubscribe anytime. No spam.

Recent Editions

View all

Saturday

18 April 2026

  • 1.TSMC reported a 58% increase in Q1 net profit, driven by record demand for AI chips and advanced node sales, leading to higher full-year revenue guidance and global expansion.
  • 2.Alibaba introduced "Happy Oyster", an AI world model that generates consistent, interactive 3D environments in real time, aiming to challenge Tencent in film, gaming, and VR applications.
  • 3.South Korean president Lee Jae Myung arrives in New Delhi for a state visit, with a Monday summit set to cover AI, shipbuilding, defence and small modular reactors alongside a $50 billion bilateral trade target.
Read edition

Friday

17 April 2026

  • 1.TSMC reported record profits and increased its revenue forecast for 2026, driven by extremely robust demand for advanced AI chips, with production capacity remaining tight.
  • 2.Stanford's 2026 AI Index reveals China has significantly narrowed the AI model performance gap with the US and now leads in several key AI metrics like citations and patents.
  • 3.Manycore Tech soared 144% on its Hong Kong debut, signalling investor appetite for Hangzhou's spatial-intelligence AI startups and opening the door for more IPOs from the "Little Dragons" cluster.
Read edition

Friday

17 April 2026

  • 1.STT GDC and SuperX opened an AI Innovation Centre in Singapore, offering free two-week trials of Nvidia Blackwell GPUs for regional enterprises to develop AI solutions.
  • 2.SoftBank, Sony, Honda, and NEC formed a new company with government backing to develop a sovereign Japanese AI model, targeting a one-trillion-parameter LLM.
  • 3.Huawei Cloud officially launched its Model-as-a-Service offering across Asia Pacific at Jakarta's AI Boost Day, giving enterprises pay-by-the-token access to GLM, DeepSeek and Qwen models.
Read edition

Thursday

16 April 2026

  • 1.The 2026 Stanford AI Index reveals China's AI model performance has nearly matched the US, with only a 2.7 per cent gap.
  • 2.SoftBank, NEC, Sony, and Honda have formed a joint venture in Japan to develop a domestic physical AI foundation model.
  • 3.Southeast Asian nations, led by Singapore with a 61 per cent adoption rate, are showing strong optimism and uptake in AI.
Read edition

Tuesday

14 April 2026

  • 1.Japan's major technology companies, including SoftBank, Honda, Sony, and NEC, have launched a joint venture to build a trillion-parameter AI for autonomous machines, ensuring all data remains within Japan.
  • 2.Chinese embodied AI startup Spirit AI secured $420 million from prominent investors, including Lei Jun and Jack Ma, to develop humanoid robots and general-purpose robotics.
  • 3.These investments signify a strategic pivot in Asian AI, with Japan prioritising data sovereignty for physical AI and China focusing on hardware and real-world embodied intelligence.
Read edition

Monday

13 April 2026

  • 1.Japan committed an additional $4 billion in subsidies to Rapidus, bringing total public backing to $16.3 billion to establish a domestic 2nm chip foundry.
  • 2.The Stanford HAI 2026 AI Index reports the performance gap between top US and Chinese frontier AI models has narrowed to just 2.7 percent.
  • 3.Hong Kong opens the 2026 World Internet Conference Asia-Pacific Summit with six AI governance sub-forums spanning agents, security, finance and health.
Read edition