In this photo illustration, a Google logo is displayed on the screen of a smartphone.
Sopa Images | Lightrocket | Getty Images
China said Tuesday it will launch an investigation into Google over alleged antitrust violations.
The country’s State Administration for Market Regulation said that it would initiate an investigation into the technology giant because of alleged violations of China’s anti-monopoly law, according to a Google translation of the official statement.
The statement followed closed on the heels of China announcing additional tariffs on select U.S. goods.
China’s finance ministry said it will levy tariffs of 15% on coal and liquified natural gas imports from the U.S., starting Feb. 10. It will also impose 10% higher duties on American crude oil, farm equipment and certain cars and trucks.
The Google investigation could end without any penalties, Julian Evans Pritchard, head of China economics at Capital Economics said in a note.
Google is facing regulatory scrutiny in several countries including the U.S.
The company lost a lawsuit in August filed by the U.S government in 2020. It accused the firm of having a monopoly in the general search market by creating strong barriers to entry.
Following the ruling, the U.S. Department of Justice pushed in November for Google to divest its Chrome browser. The department also argued that Google should not be allowed to enter into exclusionary agreements with third parties such as Apple and Samsung.
Nintendo has kept players interested in its ageing Switch console series through key games with characters such as Super Mario and Zelda.
Charly Triballeau | AFP | Getty Images
Nintendo on Tuesday reported weaker-than-expected top and bottom results for its fiscal third quarter, slashing its forecast for the Switch consoleahead of the release of its succesor.
Here’s how Nintendo did in its fiscal third quarter ended Dec. 31 versus LSEG estimates:
Revenue: 432.92 billion Japanese yen ($2.8 billion), compared with 498.22 billion yen expected.
Net profit: 128.53 billion yen, versus 136.16 billion yen expected.
Net profit fell 6% year-on-year.
While Nintendo’s quarterly results missed expectations, all eyes are on developments regarding the Japanese gaming giant’s Switch 2, the successor to the Switch, which was first released in 2017, and has become one of the Japanese gaming giant’s most popular consoles in history.
Nintendo last month teased the Switch 2 in a trailer showing off the hardware. Notably, Nintendo announced that some Switch games will be compatible with the Switch 2. The company has yet to announce a price or release date for the new console, but said more details will be revealed at its Nintendo Direct event on April 2.
Nintendo has attempted to maintain momentum for the Switch by releasing slightly updated versions of it and by boosting the appeal of its characters like Super Mario through movies. However, interest in the nearly 8-year-old console is beginning to wane.
Ahead of the release of the Switch 2, Nintendo slashed a number of forecasts for its full-year results which ends on March 31.
Nintendo said it now expects to sell 11 million units of its current Switch console, down from a previously-reduced estimate of 12.5 million units. The company also said it sees net profit at 270 billion yen, a 10% reduction from the prior forecast of 300 billion.
In the December quarter, Nintendo sold 4.82 million Switch consoles, bringing the total for the current fiscal year to 9.54 million units. That is down 30.6% year-on-year.
Switch success a ‘double-edged sword’
Nintendo Switch has sold 150.86 million units of the Switch since its launch, making it the company’s second-most successful console, behind the Nintendo DS on 154.02 million units.
Key to the success has been the 129 million annual playing users which have bought the steady stream of hit games that Nintendo has launched, featuring well-known brands like Pokemon and characters like Zelda and Super Mario.
But Nintendo has a careful challenge now convincing its users of the need to upgrade to the Switch 2, according to George Jijiashvili, senior principal analyst at Omdia.
“The phenomenal success of the Switch is a double-edged sword,” Jijiashvili said by email, adding that Nintendo is “well-positioned for its second-generation hardware launch” given its huge user base.
“However, the biggest challenge will be managing the transition effectively – convincing users to upgrade to the Switch 2 while ensuring those sticking with the original Switch remain supported and engaged.”
Omdia expects the Switch 2 to launch in the first half of 2025 with Nintendo selling 14.7 million units of the new console this year.
“Switch 2 outselling and outpacing the original Switch is a very tall order – this will be a huge challenge for Nintendo to navigate,” Jijiashvili said.
DeepSeek’s powerful new artificial intelligence model isn’t just a win for China — it’s a victory for open-source versions of the tech from the likes of Meta, Databricks, Mistral and Hugging Face, according to industry experts who spoke with CNBC.
The development caused the market values of Nvidia and other chipmakers to plummet on fears that it could lead to reduced spending on high-performance computing infrastructure.
DeepSeek is a Chinese AI lab that focuses on developing large language models with the ultimate aim of achieving artificial general intelligence, or AGI. It was founded in 2023 by Liang Wenfeng, co-founder of AI-focused quantitative hedge fund High-Flyer.
AGI loosely refers to the idea of an AI that equals or surpasses human intellect on a wide range of tasks.
What is open-source AI?
Since OpenAI’s ChatGPT burst onto the scene in November 2022, AI researchers have been working hard to understand and improve upon the advances of the foundational large language model technology that underpins it.
One area of focus for many labs has been open-source AI. Open source refers to software whose source code is made freely available on the open web for possible modification and redistribution.
Plenty of firms from tech giants like Meta to scrappier startups such as Mistral and Hugging Face have been betting on open-source as a way to improve on the technology while also sharing important developments with the wider research community.
How DeepSeek empowered open source
DeepSeek’s technological breakthrough has only made the case for open-source AI models stronger, according to some tech executives.
Seena Rejal, chief commercial officer of AI startup NetMind, told CNBC the Chinese firm’s success shows that open-source AI is “no longer just a non commercial research initiative but a viable, scalable alternative to closed models” like OpenAI’s GPT.
“DeepSeek R1 has demonstrated that open-source models can achieve state-of-the-art performance, rivaling proprietary models from OpenAI and others,” Rejal told CNBC. “This challenges the belief that only closed-source models can dominate innovation in this space.”
Rejal isn’t alone. Yann LeCun, Meta’s chief AI scientist, said DeepSeek’s success represents a victory for open-source AI models, not necessarily a win for China over the United States. Meta is behind a popular open-source AI model called Llama.
“To people who see the performance of DeepSeek and think: ‘China is surpassing the U.S. in AI.’ You are reading this wrong. The correct reading is: ‘Open source models are surpassing proprietary ones’,” he said in a post on LinkedIn.
Read more DeepSeek coverage
“DeepSeek has profited from open research and open source (e.g. PyTorch and Llama from Meta). They came up with new ideas and built them on top of other people’s work. Because their work is published and open source, everyone can profit from it. That is the power of open research and open source.”
Open-source AI going global
Cut off by Washington from accessing advanced chips needed to train and run AI models, China has turned to open-source technology to boost the appeal of its AI models. Many Chinese firms — DeepSeek included — are pursuing open source models as a way to increase innovation and spread their use.
But the trend of companies turning to open-source technologies for success in AI isn’t limited to China. In Europe, an alliance of academics, companies and data centers have partnered on developing a family of high-performing, multilingual large language models, called OpenEuroLLM.
The alliance is led by Jan Hajič, a renowned computational linguist at Charles University, Czechia, and Peter Sarlin, the co-founder of Silo AI, an AI lab that was bought by U.S. chipmaker AMD last year.
The initiative forms part of a broader push for “AI sovereignty,” in which countries are encouraging investment in their own domestic AI labs and data centers to reduce a reliance on Silicon Valley.
What’s the catch?
There are downsides to open-source AI, however. Experts warn that, although open-source tech is a good thing for innovation, it is also more prone to cyber exploitation. That’s because it can be repackaged and modified by anyone.
Cybersecurity firms have already discovered vulnerabilities in DeepSeek’s AI models. Research that Cisco released last week revealed that R1 contained critical safety flaws.
Using “algorithmic jailbreaking techniques,” Cisco’s AI safety research team says it got R1 to provide affirmative responses to a series of harmful prompts from the popular HarmBench “with a 100% attack success rate.”
“DeepSeek R1 was purportedly trained with a fraction of the budgets that other frontier model providers spend on developing their models. However, it comes at a different cost: safety and security,” Cisco researchers Paul Kassianik and Amin Karbasi wrote.
Data leakage is also a concern. Data processed by DeepSeek’s R1 model via its website or app is sent straight to China. Chinese tech firms have long been dogged by allegations that Beijing uses their systems to spy on Western entities and individuals.
“DeepSeek, like other generative AI platforms, presents a double-edged sword for businesses and individuals alike,” said Matt Cooke, cybersecurity strategist EMEA at Proofpoint. “While the potential for innovation is undeniable, the risk of data leakage is a serious concern.”
“DeepSeek is relatively new, and it will take time to learn about the technology; however, what we do know is feeding sensitive company data or personal information into these systems is like handing attackers a loaded weapon,” Cooke added.
NetMind’s Rejal told CNBC that open-source AI models introduce cybersecurity risks which businesses need to consider, including software supply chain attacks, prompt jailbreaking and so-called “data poisoning” events that try to introduce biases or harmful outputs.
Gains were broad-based across tech stocks in Japan, South Korea and Hong Kong, and came as their counterparts in the U.S. cut their losses on Monday, following tariff announcements that came late in the day.
Japanese Semiconductor players Advantest and Lasertec led gains among the country’s tech stocks, rising 5% and 4.81%, respectively.
Taiwanese chip company TSMC and manufacturer Foxconn rose 2.8% and
Tech stocks in Asia had come under pressure after Chinese startup DeepSeek launched a free, open-source language model that challenged the supremacy of the U.S.-led AI ecosystem. These stocks subsequently rebounded last week, but the rally mostly got stalled Monday over tariff worries.
South Korean tech stocks were also trading higher on Tuesday, with Samsung Electronics gaining 4.13% and SK Hynix rising marginally, up 0.63%.
Chinese tech major Tencent’s shares rose 3.07% in HongKong, while shopping platform Meituan’s stock advanced 5.06%, electronic vehicle maker BYD rose 4.22%, Xpeng was trading 14.46% higher and Li Auto gained 9.35%.
The gains in Chinese companies come even as U.S. tariffs on CnaChina are set to kick in. Trump will reportedly speak with President Xi Jinping this week, signaling the intent to avoid a broader tariff war between the world’s top two economies.
Correction: The story has been updated to reflect that the U.S. has paused tariffs on Canada and Mexico.