Tencent quarterly revenue up 13% on AI, gaming boost
The company benefits from regulatory easing in China’s gaming sector following stringent restrictions in previous years
DeeperDive is a beta AI feature. Refer to full articles for the facts.
[BEIJING] Tencent Holdings, China’s biggest technology company by market capitalisation, posted a 13 per cent rise in first-quarter revenue on Wednesday (May 14), boosted by growth in gaming and AI-enhanced advertising.
Tencent, also the world’s largest video game company and operator of the WeChat messaging platform, reported revenue of 180 billion yuan (S$32.4 billion) for the quarter ended Mar 31.
The results exceeded the 174.6 billion yuan average estimate from analysts polled by LSEG.
Net profit for the quarter was 47.8 billion yuan, compared with analyst expectations of 52.2 billion yuan, LSEG data showed.
The revenue growth was led by robust performance in the gaming segment, as the company benefited from regulatory easing in China’s gaming sector following stringent restrictions in previous years.
For the quarter, domestic gaming revenue rose by 24 per cent to 42.9 billion yuan, and international gaming revenue climbed 23 per cent to 16.6 billion yuan.
Navigate Asia in
a new global order
Get the insights delivered to your inbox.
Titles that drove the growth included Dungeon & Fighter Mobile, launched in May 2024, and shooting game Delta Force, which debuted in September.
Tencent has increased its AI investments, and in March said it would allocate a low double-digit percentage of 2025 revenue to capital expenditure, primarily for AI development.
This follows the company’s 39 billion yuan AI-focused spending in the fourth quarter of 2024.
SEE ALSO
The company has developed its own proprietary large language model Hunyuan, and in March made public a version called T1.
It has also been among the most open of its peers to adopting third-party technology.
Tencent became the first major Chinese tech company to integrate technology from DeepSeek, a Chinese AI startup that gained prominence early this year with its release of AI models that rival Western counterparts at lower development costs.
The DeepSeek integration has been rolled out across Tencent’s core products, including WeChat – the company’s flagship messaging and payment platform with over one billion active users – and Yuanbao, Tencent’s own AI assistant.
Revenues from marketing services for the quarter were 17.7 billion, up 22 per cent year on year, partly because of robust AI-driven adtech upgrades whose benefits include more targeted advertising.
The company’s FinTech and Business Services segment, which includes consumer loans, wealth management and cloud services, posted revenue of 27.6 billion yuan, a 16 per cent increase. REUTERS
Decoding Asia newsletter: your guide to navigating Asia in a new global order. Sign up here to get Decoding Asia newsletter. Delivered to your inbox. Free.
Share with us your feedback on BT's products and services
TRENDING NOW
‘Boring’ is the new black: The stars are aligning for a Singapore stock market revival
Near sell-out launches in March boost developer sales to 1,300 units after four slow months
China pips the US if Asean is forced to choose, but analysts warn against reading it like a sports result
Genting Singapore’s Lim Kok Thay receives S$7.5 million pay package for FY2025