Baidu Shares Plunge, $2.4 Billion Wiped Off Market Value Amid Xi Meeting Speculation

Baidu's Market Value Falls by $2.4 Billion Due to Speculation Over Xi Jinping Meeting
Baidu's Market Value Falls by $2.4 Billion Due to Speculation Over Xi Jinping Meeting

The Hong Kong shares of Baidu (9888.HK) plunged on Monday, wiping $2.4 billion off its market value, after the founder of the Chinese search engine giant was not spotted at a rare meeting between President Xi Jinping and corporate leaders.

Xi hosted a symposium in Beijing with the country’s top tycoons, including Alibaba (9988.HK) founder Jack Ma and Huawei’s Ren Zhengfei, although two sources told Reuters there was no sign of Baidu’s founder, Robin Li, attending.

Investor Concerns and Market Reaction

Investors and market players pay close attention to the presence of senior executives at such key meetings, where the absence of a corporate leader can trigger speculation over a company’s standing. Shares of Baidu slid as much as 8.8% before paring losses to close down 7%.

Baidu, with its market value now at HK$252.05 billion ($32.4 billion), was the biggest loser on both the Hang Seng Index (HSI) and Hang Seng Tech Index (HSTECH).

Brokers’ Insights

Brokers said Baidu’s shares had been weak since the morning after it said it would fully connect its search engine to Chinese AI start-up DeepSeek and its proprietary Ernie large language model.

“That implies the company is losing its edge after all these years of taking a leading role through its development of Ernie, suggesting the firm may need to catch up with newcomers like DeepSeek,” a sales director at a regional brokerage said, declining to be identified due to the sensitivity of the issue, reports Reuters.

Government Support and Future Outlook

The meeting with Xi signalled the government’s support for China’s technology sector after years of regulatory controls as Beijing seeks to boost economic growth and navigate increasingly uncertain relations with the United States.

For its part, Baidu has ramped up its push into AI as it seeks to reduce its reliance on advertising revenue from its core search engine business.

The company was among the first to launch a ChatGPT-style chatbot in early 2023, following the launch of OpenAI’s ChatGPT in late 2022.

About Benjamin Noah 215 Articles
Benjamin is an all-around geek who loves learning new stuff every day. With a background in computer science and a passion for web-based technologies and gadgets and focus on writing about Web Trends, Smartphones, and Tablets.

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