TLDR
- Alibaba and Siemens are teaming up to bring computer-aided engineering (CAE) tools to Chinese customers via the cloud as Infrastructure-as-a-Service.
- Siemens will deploy its simulation software on Alibaba Cloud, giving engineering teams access to high-performance computing environments.
- The two companies are exploring using Alibaba’s Qwen AI models inside Siemens’ product lifecycle management software.
- Alibaba chairman Joe Tsai said AI agents could tap a market larger than all other industries combined, tied to a $50 trillion white-collar workforce.
- Alibaba’s Damo Academy also unveiled a new RISC-V-based processor chip designed for cloud computing.
Alibaba and Siemens are deepening their partnership to bring advanced industrial AI and cloud simulation tools to engineering customers in China. The deal combines Siemens’ engineering software with Alibaba Cloud’s computing infrastructure, and comes as Alibaba pushes harder into the AI era.
Alibaba Group Holding Limited, BABA
Siemens plans to put its cloud-enabled computer-aided engineering, or CAE, software on Alibaba Cloud. Customers will be able to run complex engineering simulations through the cloud without needing their own high-powered hardware.
The setup will offer scalable simulation environments, including virtual simulation tools and high-performance computing clusters, all delivered via Alibaba’s cloud platform.
The companies say this will let engineering teams run demanding simulations faster and more efficiently. It targets industries in China that rely on advanced product design and testing.
AI Models Enter the Engineering Workflow
Beyond cloud infrastructure, the two companies are also looking at how Alibaba’s Qwen large language models could be built into Siemens’ product lifecycle management software. That would bring AI-assisted tools directly into engineering and product development workflows.
Siemens technology is already powering some of Alibaba’s physical infrastructure. Siemens systems are being used at Alibaba’s Zhangbei Data Center, one of the company’s large-scale facilities.
The announcement came alongside remarks from Alibaba Group chairman Joe Tsai at the Siemens RXD Summit in Beijing. Tsai spoke about what he called the “agentic era” of artificial intelligence.
Tsai described AI agents as “virtual knowledge workers” capable of handling many tasks that humans do today. He pointed to the global white-collar economy, valued at nearly $50 trillion, as the potential market that AI agents could reshape.
“When you consider the global economy is $110 trillion, with nearly $50 trillion tied to white-collar knowledge workers, you begin to see the scale of market potential,” Tsai said.
Alibaba’s Broader AI Push
Alibaba’s Qwen app had 300 million monthly active users as of February 2026. The company has also said it is making Model-as-a-Service, or MaaS, an organizational priority going forward.
On the same day as the Siemens partnership announcement, Alibaba’s research arm, Damo Academy, unveiled a new chip. The XuanTie C950 is a RISC-V-based central processor unit built for cloud computing workloads.
Alibaba carries a market cap of around $300 billion and revenue of $142 billion. Its gross margin stands at 40.76%, while the stock’s RSI recently sat at 30.79, a level that some analysts view as approaching oversold territory.
Analyst sentiment on Alibaba stock is cautiously positive, with a consensus target price of $187.37.







