Ant Group is testing an overhaul of its Alipay super app that would introduce an AI agent interface, according to people familiar with the plans and a video demo viewed by those same sources. The assistant, pronounced “Ah Bao” in Chinese, allows users to book car rides, order coffee, arrange takeout, and conduct money-management tasks like buying mutual funds through typing or voice commands. Alipay has more than a billion users. WeChat, operated by Tencent and also testing its own AI agent prototype, has more than a billion users. The two platforms are already embedded into every aspect of daily digital life in China, from utility payments to travel booking to entertainment, and both are now racing to layer AI agency on top of that embedded position. The test release for Alipay’s new version is internal only, with no finalized release schedule yet.
The competitive urgency behind the Alipay overhaul runs through the OpenClaw framework, which Tencent has been leveraging aggressively with a rapid release schedule of new products capitalizing on its viral appeal. Tencent is China’s most valuable company and has been on a furious release cadence since OpenClaw captured consumer attention. Ant’s Alipay sits in a structurally advantageous position for the AI agent use case: the app already handles financial transactions, which means an AI agent operating within it can move money with user authorization in ways that most agent frameworks still treat as a future capability. A user asking “Ah Bao” to rebalance a mutual fund position or execute a payment is not a new behavior pattern for Alipay – it is the existing behavior pattern with a conversational interface layered on top. The WeChat framing that positions this as a direct competition misses that specific advantage, and it is what NewsTrackerToday unpacks when separating the structural position from the competitive narrative.
Isabella Moretti examines the financial position that context: “Ant posted a 79% decrease in profit over the last three months of 2025 as it ramped AI spending in healthcare and large language model development. That is a company making an explicit bet that near-term earnings matter less than competitive positioning in the AI cycle. The question is whether the AI spending generates a product differentiation that pays off in user engagement and transaction volume before the cost position becomes untenable. Tencent, Alibaba, and ByteDance spent billions on AI chatbot marketing during the recent Lunar New Year alone. The introduction of AI agents across these platforms will increase operating costs further as compute requirements grow with each query.”
Ant’s AI bets span a wider range than the Alipay agent overhaul. The company last year showcased its first humanoid robot, capable of providing medical consultation and performing basic kitchen tasks. Its AQ health care app served 140 million users as of September 2025. Ant International, the company’s global arm, is reportedly considering raising approximately $1 billion to accelerate growth, with sources familiar with the matter suggesting a potential valuation of $10 billion or more. Stack these initiatives together and the outlines of Ant’s post-IPO-cancellation strategy become visible: pivot from financial services regulation toward AI infrastructure investments that regulators have less direct reason to constrain. The cost story behind that strategy is what NewsTrackerToday draws out: the 79% profit decline is the price Ant is paying today for the AI positioning it hopes to monetize tomorrow.
Ethan Cole reads the valuation trajectory with characteristic brevity: “2020 IPO attempt: $280 billion valuation. 2023 share repurchase proposal: $79 billion valuation. Ant International fundraise consideration: $10 billion or more. The numbers tell the story of regulatory intervention compressing valuation across multiple successive marks.” The gap between $280 billion and the current trajectory is the measure of what Chinese regulatory action on the technology sector achieved between 2020 and 2026, and it is a gap that Ant has been narrowing by repositioning into AI where the regulatory environment is more permissive. Ant’s global arm exploring a $10 billion raise suggests the company sees capital access at that scale as both achievable and necessary, and the Alipay AI agent overhaul – still in internal testing, timing not finalized – is the product proof point the capital story needs. The valuation gap from 2020 is what News Tracker Today pays attention to as the context that makes the Alipay overhaul more than a product announcement.
The Alipay AI agent represents a specific kind of strategic turn that is worth naming plainly. Ant Group entered the 2020s as the world’s most valuable private financial company, was stopped by Chinese regulators from going public at that valuation, and has spent the intervening years rebuilding its strategic position around healthcare AI, large language models, humanoid robotics, and now a conversational AI agent for its existing billion-user payment platform. The financial services company that regulators constrained has quietly become an AI company that regulators have less obvious reason to stop. The shift is real, the path has been methodical, and the Ah Bao agent is the most public indicator yet of where Ant intends to land. What NewsTrackerToday notes as the IPO detour is not a detour after all: it looks more like a forced route correction that led Ant to a destination the original IPO would not have required it to find.