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Teacher Wang Guanxin of the ITutorGroup instructs other teachers how to teach online in Shanghai. Educational services are moving online amid the coronavirus health crisis, giving a boost to the cloud market. Photo: AFP

Tencent, Baidu gain ground on Alibaba as China’s cloud market expands at rapid pace

  • China’s cloud infrastructure market grew 66.9 per cent to US$3.3 billion in the fourth quarter of last year
  • Baidu’s AI Cloud moved into third place with an 8.8 per cent share in the fourth quarter

Chinese tech giants Tencent Holdings and Baidu are gaining ground in China’s fast growing cloud infrastructure market although Alibaba Group Holding still leads the sector by a wide margin.

Tencent Cloud’s share in the country, the second biggest cloud market in the world, grew to 18 per cent in the fourth quarter of 2019, behind Alibaba which accounted for 46.6 per cent of the total spend as the biggest cloud service provider in China, according to a Canalys report last week. Alibaba is the parent company of the South China Morning Post.

Tencent is gradually catching up with the leading player. In the first quarter of last year Alibaba and Tencent accounted for 47.3 per cent and 15.4 per cent of the market respectively, a report by Canalys in June showed.

Baidu’s AI Cloud moved into third place with an 8.8 per cent share in the fourth quarter, up from 8 per cent and fourth place in the first quarter of 2019, behind Alibaba, Tencent and Amazon.

China’s cloud infrastructure market grew 66.9 per cent to US$3.3 billion in the fourth quarter of last year, which accounted for a 10.8 per cent share of the global total. For the full year, China’s spending on cloud infrastructure services increased 63.7 per cent to US$10.7 billion.

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The cloud market in China is expected to receive a boost this year after major players rushed to offer cloud capability to keep the country operational during the coronavirus outbreak, helping to move government, business and educational services online.

The outlook is positive for 2020 because organisations will assess their business continuity measures after the health crisis is over with a view to shifting more applications to the cloud, Canalys said.

“The benefits of cloud computing were demonstrated by the leading cloud service providers in response to the escalating coronavirus crisis,” said Canalys senior analyst Yih Khai Wong. “They rapidly deployed continuity measures for organizations and established resource-intensive workloads to analyse vast datasets.

“Cloud companies opened their platforms, allowing new and existing customers to use more resources for free to help maintain operations.”

However, Tencent also warned of the negative impact of the coronavirus outbreak. “The COVID-19 pandemic is delaying customers’ implementation of cloud-related initiatives and will thus negatively impact our near-term cloud services revenues,” the company said when it reported earnings last Wednesday.

“We believe enterprises will be increasingly keen to adopt cloud-based solutions over the longer term, in order to facilitate remote working and remote interactions with their customers,” Tencent said.

The company reported 17 billion yuan (US$2.4 billion) in cloud services revenue and 1 million paying customers for 2019, the year after shifting its focus to enterprise-facing businesses, including cloud, from consumer products including games and social media.

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