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China now has the title of the center for technological innovation, having a total of 369 unicorns, which are privately held startups valued at over $1 billion. According to a recent report, over 25% of these unicorns are involved in China’s artificial intelligence (AI) and semiconductor sectors.
The report, titled the China Unicorn Enterprise Development Report, was unveiled at the Zhongguancun Forum in Beijing. It highlights China’s growing dominance in the global startup landscape, with its unicorns collectively valued at an estimated $1.4 trillion. Among these unicorns, the AI sector leads the pack with 52 companies.
The report on China’s unicorn enterprise development was jointly released by five prominent institutions, including KPMG, the Zhongguancun Unicorn Company Development Alliance, and the Great Wall Enterprise Institute. The forum, which concluded on Monday, served as a platform for showcasing China’s technological advancements and collaboration among industry leaders.
The surge in unicorn numbers across China comes amid a decline in initial public offerings (IPOs) in major financial hubs like Hong Kong, Shanghai, and Shenzhen. Several firms, including Alibaba Group Holding, have postponed their IPOs, with the recent delay in the listing of Cainiao Smart Logistics Network. Additionally, Chinese tech giants like Tencent Holdings, Alibaba, and Baidu have nurtured unicorns, incubating 25 of these startups.
Despite China’s impressive growth in unicorn numbers, it still trails behind the United States in the overall count. Last year’s global figures, disclosed in the Global Unicorn Index 2024 by the Hurun Research Institute, indicated over 700 unicorns in the US compared to more than 340 in China. This suggests that while China has made efforts to support tech startups, it has yet to catch up with the robust unicorn ecosystem of the United States.
The geographical distribution of unicorns across China highlights certain key cities as major hubs for technological innovation. Beijing leads the pack with 114 unicorns, followed by 63 in Shanghai and 32 in Shenzhen, a prominent technology hub in southern Guangdong province. These figures show the concentration of tech innovation in China’s major urban centers.
The report highlights the valuation of Chinese unicorns, averaging $3.8 billion. AI-focused companies lead the pack at an average of $6.76 billion, closely followed by financial technology firms at $6.57 billion. Notably, the AI and semiconductor sectors collectively represent over a quarter of China’s 369 unicorns, showing the country’s dominance in these high-growth areas of technology innovation.
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