
China's Tencent beats Q2 revenue forecasts as gaming, AI fuel growth
For the three months to June, the Chinese technology giant reported revenue of 184.5 billion yuan ($25.7 billion), exceeding analyst estimates of 178.5 billion yuan, according to LSEG data.
Gaming remained a key growth driver, with domestic revenue rising 17% to 40.4 billion yuan and international revenue climbing 35% to 18.8 billion yuan.
The strong performance was fueled by flagship titles including Honor of Kings and Dungeon & Fighter Mobile.
Marketing services revenue increased 20% year-on-year to 35.8 billion yuan, bolstered by the use of AI to enhance the targeting of adverts.
Net profit for the quarter reached 55.6 billion yuan, surpassing analyst expectations of 52.3 billion yuan, LSEG data showed.
Tencent has significantly ramped up its AI investments over the past two years, with the company allocating increasingly large portions of its capital expenditure to AI initiatives.
The company's total capital expenditure was 76.8 billion yuan in 2024 and management has said that 2025 capital spending would rise to the "low teens" as a percentage of total revenue.
Second-quarter capital expenditure more than doubled year-to-year to 19.1 billion yuan, according to the earnings release.
The company has developed its own large language model, Hunyuan, launching the latest "Turbo S" version in February.
But Tencent has also embraced third-party models, notably integrating DeepSeek's technology across its platforms including WeChat, which has over 1 billion monthly active users.
Its AI assistant Yuanbao became China's most-downloaded iPhone app in early March after the DeepSeek integration, overtaking DeepSeek's own application.
($1 = 7.1756 Chinese yuan renminbi)
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Reuters
16 minutes ago
- Reuters
AI demand expected to boost electronics giant Foxconn's second-quarter profit
TAIPEI, Aug 14 (Reuters) - Taiwan's Foxconn ( opens new tab, the world's largest contract electronics maker, is expected to report on Thursday that second-quarter profit rose 14% on continued strong demand for artificial intelligence servers. Net profit for April-June for Apple's (AAPL.O), opens new tab top iPhone assembler and Nvidia's (NVDA.O), opens new tab server maker likely came in at T$39.8 billion ($1.33 billion), up from T$35.05 billion a year earlier. Foxconn, formally called Hon Hai Precision Industry, last month reported record second-quarter revenue on strong demand for AI products but cautioned about geopolitical and exchange rate headwinds. Global trade uncertainty could dim the prospects for its outlook this year, as it has a major manufacturing presence in China, though Washington and Beijing this week extended a tariff truce for another 90 days. Most of the iPhones Foxconn makes for Apple are assembled in China, but the bulk of those sold in the United States are now produced in India. The company is also building factories in Mexico and Texas to make AI servers for Nvidia. In its July sales report, Foxconn said while the third quarter should see on-year growth - the company does not provide numerical guidance - the impact of "evolving global political and economic conditions" would need continued close monitoring. Foxconn has also been looking to expand its footprint in electric vehicles, which the company sees as a major future growth generator, though that has not always gone smoothly. Earlier this month, Foxconn said it had struck a deal to sell a former car factory at Lordstown, Ohio, for $375 million, including its machinery, but said it would continue to use the site to make a broader range of products aligned with its strategic priorities. Foxconn has expanded beyond its traditional role as an iPhone assembler in other areas too. Last month it formed a strategic partnership with industrial motor maker TECO Electric & Machinery ( opens new tab to build data centres. Foxconn holds its earnings call at 3 p.m. (0700 GMT) in Taipei on Thursday, where it will also update its outlook for the year. Foxconn's shares have risen 7.9% so far this year, outperforming the broader Taiwan index's (.TWII), opens new tab 5.8% gain. ($1 = 30.0020 Taiwan dollars)


Reuters
an hour ago
- Reuters
Google pledges $9 billion to expand AI, cloud infrastructure in Oklahoma
Aug 13 (Reuters) - Alphabet's Google said on Wednesday it will spend an additional $9 billion in Oklahoma over the next two years to expand cloud and artificial intelligence infrastructure. The company (GOOGL.O), opens new tab will build a new data center campus in Stillwater and expand its Pryor facility to bolster U.S. AI and cloud capacity, alongside education and workforce programs. Intensifying competition among Big Tech companies has prompted them to spend heavily on building new data center sites and skills development amid booming demand for AI services. Last month, Alphabet raised its annual capital spending plans to about $85 billion from $75 billion previously and signaled more to come next year. Alphabet and its peers have defended their heavy AI spending as essential to fueling growth and improving products amid high competition from Chinese rivals and investor frustration over slower-than-expected returns. Google also committed $1 billion to AI education and training for U.S. higher education institutions and nonprofits last week. Rivals including OpenAI, Anthropic and Amazon (AMZN.O), opens new tab have made similar pushes around AI in education. More than 100 universities have signed on to Google's initiative so far, including some of the nation's largest public university systems such as Texas A&M and the University of North Carolina. Meanwhile, U.S. President Donald Trump's onshoring push has also accelerated AI infrastructure investments by companies such as Micron (MU.O), opens new tab, Nvidia (NVDA.O), opens new tab and CoreWeave (CRWV.O), opens new tab. Apple (AAPL.O), opens new tab also announced last week that it plans to spend $600 billion in the U.S. over the next four years.


Reuters
an hour ago
- Reuters
Cisco sees higher-than-expected quarterly revenue on increased networking gear demand
Aug 13 (Reuters) - Cisco Systems (CSCO.O), opens new tab forecast first-quarter revenue above Wall Street estimates on Wednesday, as the artificial intelligence boom boosted demand for its networking equipment from cloud customers. Enterprises such as Cisco have been benefiting as more businesses move workloads to cloud environments and modernize campus footprints to prepare for AI technologies. "The AI infrastructure orders we received from webscale customers in fiscal 2025 were more than double our original target, indicating a massive opportunity ahead as we lead the required architectural shift and build the critical infrastructure needed for the AI era," CEO Chuck Robbins said in a statement. Cisco's AI infrastructure orders exceeded $800 million in the fourth quarter, bringing the total for fiscal 2025 to more than $2 billion, Robbins said on a post-earnings call. Cisco has not seen any pull-forward in demand for products, he added. The company expects its revenue to be between $14.65 billion and $14.85 billion for the first quarter, compared with analysts' average estimate of $14.62 billion, according to data compiled by LSEG. Its revenue for the fourth quarter ended July 26 came in at $14.67 billion, compared with estimates of $14.62 billion. Networking product orders grew in the double digits during the quarter, driven by webscale infrastructure, switching, enterprise routing, industrial IoT and servers.