Key Highlights
- The XuanTie C950 represents Alibaba’s latest 5nm AI chip powered by RISC-V architecture, delivering performance more than triple that of earlier versions
- Morgan Stanley maintained its Overweight designation with a $180 valuation, positioning BABA among its “Top Pick” selections
- The processor features native compatibility with major AI frameworks such as Qwen3 and DeepSeek V3
- T-Head semiconductor division carries an estimated worth between $28B and $86B according to Morgan Stanley, representing approximately $22 per share
- Analyst community assigns Strong Buy rating with mean price objective of $188.38
Alibaba Group Holding introduced its newest proprietary AI processor this Monday, prompting Morgan Stanley to quickly reaffirm its optimistic outlook on the technology giant.
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The processor carries the designation XuanTie C950. Built using advanced 5-nanometer fabrication technology and leveraging open-source RISC-V design principles, the chip delivers performance exceeding its predecessor by a factor of three. The processor features built-in support for prominent large-scale AI frameworks including Qwen3 and DeepSeek V3.
Alibaba’s T-Head semiconductor division developed the C950, representing years of strategic investment in chip design capabilities. This internal technical competency now forms a central pillar in Morgan Stanley’s thesis for the company.
Analyst Gary Yu maintained his Overweight assessment while preserving the $180 valuation target. Yu emphasized that the chip launch validates his perspective on Alibaba’s comprehensive command of critical AI infrastructure components.
BABA shares stood at $126.06 when the research note was published, reflecting a 7.7% decline across the preceding week.
Alibaba Group Holding Limited, BABA
The Strategic Implications of Proprietary Chip Development
Morgan Stanley presents a clear thesis: proprietary semiconductor technology grants Alibaba greater autonomy from external suppliers. This vertical integration strategy reduces operational expenses, enables rapid capacity expansion during demand surges, and minimizes vulnerability to American export restrictions.
The processor forms the foundation of what Morgan Stanley characterizes as Alibaba’s comprehensive AI technology architecture. Higher layers include AliCloud infrastructure for computational resources, the open-weight Qwen model ecosystem, and various consumer-oriented and business-focused applications.
Alibaba recently unveiled Wukong, an enterprise platform designed with AI-native principles and agentic functionality. The company simultaneously introduced the Alibaba Token Hub. Morgan Stanley indicated these offerings present pathways for monetizing AI engagement in future quarters.
Financial Analysis and Market Sentiment
The investment bank employs a sum-of-the-parts methodology for Alibaba, arriving at a midpoint valuation of $245. The T-Head semiconductor business alone contributes $22 per share to this calculation, derived from a valuation spectrum spanning $28 billion to $86 billion for the division.
BABA currently trades at a price-to-earnings multiple of 21.82 with an approximate market capitalization of $281.8 billion. The company maintains a balance sheet with cash holdings exceeding total debt obligations.
The broader analyst community assigns BABA a Strong Buy consensus rating. This assessment reflects eight Buy recommendations alongside one Hold rating issued during the most recent three-month period.
The mean price objective among covering analysts stands at $188.38, suggesting potential appreciation of roughly 49% from the trading level at the time Morgan Stanley released its research.
Alibaba’s latest quarterly performance fell short of market expectations. Revenue for the December quarter reached RMB284.8 billion, representing 2% growth year-over-year, or 9% when adjusted for divested operations. The figure nonetheless missed consensus forecasts by 2%.
In response to those financial results, Jefferies reduced its target from $225 to $212, while Mizuho lowered its objective from $195 to $190. Both firms retained their favorable ratings. US Tiger Securities took an alternative approach, elevating BABA from Hold to Buy with a $175 target, highlighting momentum in AI capabilities and cloud services.
BofA Securities preserved its Buy stance with a $180 valuation, similarly emphasizing Alibaba’s strategic AI investment trajectory.

