
Shares of Chinese technology companies Tencent Holdings and Zhipu surged after both firms launched new artificial intelligence agents built on the fast-growing OpenClaw platform, highlighting investor enthusiasm for the emerging AI-agent economy.
Tencent’s stock rose more than 7% in Hong Kong, its biggest single-day gain in about a year, while Zhipu shares jumped as much as 13% after unveiling its own OpenClaw-compatible AI agent.
The rally reflects growing excitement around AI agents, a new class of software designed to perform tasks autonomously rather than simply responding to prompts.
OpenClaw is an open-source AI agent system launched in late 2025 that allows developers to build autonomous digital assistants capable of performing everyday tasks such as managing emails, scheduling activities, or browsing the web.
The platform can integrate with large language models such as Anthropic’s Claude, enabling software agents to execute complex workflows rather than acting as simple chatbots.
Chinese technology companies have moved quickly to build their own versions and services around the software.
Tencent introduced WorkBuddy, an AI workplace agent designed to automate tasks for enterprise users while remaining compatible with the OpenClaw framework.
Meanwhile, Beijing-based AI developer Zhipu launched AutoClaw, a localized version of the platform that integrates with its own large language models and other Chinese AI systems.
The rapid rollout of OpenClaw-based tools has triggered a broader rally in Chinese AI stocks.
Companies across China’s technology sector including cloud providers and AI startups are racing to release their own AI agents built around the platform, hoping to capitalize on growing demand for automation software.
The enthusiasm is also being supported by local government incentives, with several Chinese tech hubs offering subsidies, computing resources, and office support to companies building products based on OpenClaw.
The rise of OpenClaw comes amid an intensifying AI race within China’s technology industry, where companies such as Tencent, Baidu, ByteDance, Alibaba, and Zhipu are investing heavily in large language models and AI-driven services.
Zhipu also known internationally as Z.ai is considered one of China’s leading AI startups and a major competitor in the country’s rapidly evolving large-model market.
For investors, the emergence of AI agents represents the next stage in generative AI development, shifting the focus from conversational chatbots toward systems capable of executing tasks and automating workflows across applications.
As companies race to build tools around OpenClaw and similar frameworks, the momentum is increasingly shaping both China’s AI innovation ecosystem and its technology stock market.
Discover more from TechBooky
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.







