ByteDance Eyes Iluvatar CoreX and Baidu Chips in Major AI Hardware Shift

ByteDance is negotiating with Iluvatar CoreX and Baidu for AI inference chips, marking a strategic shift to domestic suppliers as U.S. export controls reshape China's chip market. The deals could redefine the competitive landscape for AI hardware in the world's second-largest economy.

By Inside AI June 15, 2026
AI neural network visualization

June 15, 2026, (Inside AI) — ByteDance, the parent company of TikTok, is in advanced discussions with Shanghai-based chip startup Iluvatar CoreX to secure a substantial supply of AI inference chips. The talks, confirmed by two sources close to the negotiations, also include a parallel evaluation of Baidu's Kunlunxin processors, signaling a major realignment in China's AI hardware supply chain.

A Strategic Pivot in China's Chip Landscape

If finalized, Iluvatar CoreX would join Huawei and Cambricon as ByteDance's third major domestic GPU supplier. The move underscores how Chinese tech giants are rapidly diversifying away from foreign silicon, driven by both policy and pragmatism. ByteDance's appetite for inference hardware has surged alongside the explosive growth of Doubao, its flagship AI chatbot, which demands massive real-time query processing.

Domestic Chips Gain Ground

Chinese GPU and AI chipmakers captured nearly 41% of the country's AI accelerator server market last year, a sharp erosion of Nvidia's once-dominant position. While Nvidia's market share in China has effectively fallen to zero, according to CEO Jensen Huang, Tencent's Chief Strategy Officer James Mitchell noted in May that Chinese AI chips would become available in large quantities in the second half of this year.

The potential deals demonstrate that efforts by Chinese chipmakers to offer alternatives to foreign AI chips are gaining traction as Beijing promotes the use of locally developed chips to improve self-reliance amid U.S. export controls on advanced chips.

Inside the ByteDance-Iluvatar CoreX Talks

Iluvatar CoreX is expected to ship at least 50,000 chips to ByteDance this year, with the bulk earmarked for inference workloads. Inference involves answering user queries, a distinct and less compute-intensive task than AI model training. The sources cautioned that details remain fluid and subject to change.

ByteDance is also considering Baidu's Kunlunxin chips, the sources said. Tencent is already a Kunlunxin customer, according to one source. ByteDance, Iluvatar CoreX, Baidu, and Tencent did not respond to requests for comment.

A Startup's Commercial Breakthrough

For Iluvatar CoreX, a deal with ByteDance would mark a pivotal shift from government contracts to high-volume commercial deployment. The company, which listed in Hong Kong in January, reported 1 billion yuan ($148 million) in 2025 revenue, about 90% from GPU sales. Its Tiangai series targets AI training, while the Zhikai line is optimized for inference.

Huatai Securities projects Iluvatar CoreX's revenue will hit 3.04 billion yuan ($449.8 million) this year, with total shipments surging 139% to over 100,000 chips. The broker estimates Zhikai inference chips carry an average selling price of 12,000 yuan ($1,775) each. Iluvatar CoreX shares rose 12% in Hong Kong following the Reuters report.

What's Driving the Urgency

ByteDance's scramble for domestic chips reflects both the tightening U.S. export controls and the sheer scale of its AI ambitions. Doubao's rapid user growth demands a resilient, cost-effective inference infrastructure that foreign suppliers can no longer guarantee. The talks with Iluvatar CoreX and Baidu suggest ByteDance is hedging its bets, potentially blending multiple domestic sources to avoid single-vendor risk.

Yet challenges remain. Domestic chips still lag behind Nvidia's in raw performance, and scaling production to meet ByteDance's needs will test Iluvatar CoreX's manufacturing and support capabilities. The startup's heavy reliance on government deals until now raises questions about its readiness for the rigors of commercial hyperscale deployments.

The Bigger Picture

ByteDance's moves are part of a broader industry shift. As Chinese cloud providers and internet giants race to build sovereign AI stacks, domestic chipmakers are seizing a once-in-a-generation opportunity. The outcome of these talks could set a precedent for how China's tech ecosystem balances performance, supply security, and political alignment in the AI era.

More from Inside AI

  • Machine Learning

    Anthropic Accuses China’s Alibaba of Largest-Ever Claude AI Model Theft

    June 25, 2026
  • Generative AI

    China’s Z.ai Narrows AI Frontier Gap with GLM-5.2 After Anthropic Shutdown

    June 25, 2026
  • Artificial Intelligence (AI)

    Amazon Pours $13 Billion into India AI Data Centres as Cloud War Intensifies

    June 25, 2026
  • Artificial Intelligence (AI)

    Mumbai Embraces AI Crowd Monitoring at Top Sites Before Ganeshotsav

    June 25, 2026
  • Artificial Intelligence (AI)

    China’s AI and Rare Earth Leverage Exposes Fragile U.S. Ties, Scholar Warns

    June 25, 2026
  • Machine Learning

    IBM Unveils 0.7nm Chip Tech, Stacking Transistors in 3D for AI Era

    June 25, 2026
  • Generative AI

    Facebook Launches AI-Powered Creator Studio App in India to Boost Creator Growth

    June 25, 2026
  • Agentic AI

    MIT and Microsoft’s Murakkab Slashes AI Agent Energy Use by 73%

    June 25, 2026

Never Miss a Breakthrough

Join 50,000+ readers who get our daily AI intelligence briefing. No fluff, just what matters.

Inside AI is an independent publication covering artificial intelligence news, machine learning research, and the tools shaping the future of technology. No fluff. No hype. Just what matters.

Topics

  • Artificial Intelligence
  • Machine Learning
  • Generative AI
  • Agentic AI
  • Vibe Coding
  • Prompt Engineering
  • AI Tools & Reviews (Coming soon)

Company

  • Editorial Standards
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Service
  • Contact

© 2026 Inside AI. All rights reserved.

Designed by Blue Flare Digital