- ByteDance, the Beijing-based owner of TikTok and Douyin, has outlined plans for approximately Rmb160 billion ($23 billion) in AI capital expenditure in 2026, marking an increase over this year.
- Around half of the proposed budget is aimed at advanced semiconductors, with challenges looming due to US export restrictions on high-end chips and questions about how this will affect global competitiveness.
What happened: Plans for increased AI capital expenditure
ByteDance, the Chinese technology group best known internationally as the owner of TikTok, has laid out preliminary plans to significantly increase its investment in artificial intelligence infrastructure in 2026. According to reporting by the Financial Times, the company is considering a capital expenditure budget of about Rmb160 billion, or roughly $23 billion, aimed at strengthening its position in AI amid intensifying competition with major United States technology firms.
This proposed figure represents an increase compared with ByteDance’s AI-related spending this year. Approximately half of the planned allocation — around Rmb85 billion — is expected to go towards buying advanced AI semiconductors and processors that support the training and deployment of machine learning models. The investment signals ByteDance’s intention to scale its compute infrastructure across areas such as content recommendations, advertising systems, and generative AI solutions.
However, the company’s access to the most advanced chips remains uncertain. US export controls have restricted the sale of cutting-edge Nvidia hardware to Chinese firms, forcing organisations like ByteDance to navigate a complex supply environment and seek alternative strategies, such as ordering less restricted Nvidia H200 processors or leasing data centre capacity overseas that can use more capable hardware.
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Why it’s important
This planned expansion of AI spending by ByteDance reflects broader global dynamics in the technology sector. As US tech giants — including Microsoft, Alphabet and Meta — pour hundreds of billions of dollars into AI infrastructure, Chinese companies are under pressure to respond even as they confront geopolitical constraints on hardware access.
ByteDance’s proposed increase in capital expenditure underscores the strategic importance of compute power in AI-driven businesses. High-performance processors and large data-centre footprints are crucial for training and refining large language models, recommendation engines and other generative AI tools that underpin core products like TikTok’s content algorithms.
Yet questions remain about how effective this spending will be in practice. While greater investment in AI infrastructure may help ByteDance narrow the technological gaps with its global competitors, Chinese firms still lag behind the sheer scale of spending by US hyperscalers. Reportedly, major US tech companies have invested hundreds of billions in data centres and AI compute in recent years, dwarfing individual budgets like ByteDance’s.
There is also considerable uncertainty about whether more spending will translate into leading-edge AI capabilities. Supply chain restrictions and export controls continue to limit access to top-tier chips, and even if ByteDance secures more hardware, performance of its AI models may still trail those developed by competitors that have unfettered access to the latest silicon and software ecosystems.
Moreover, steering such a large investment without clear disclosure — as ByteDance is privately held and does not publicly report detailed financials — adds another layer of ambiguity for analysts trying to assess its impact on the company’s long-term competitiveness.
