Tencent recently released its full-year 2025 earnings report: total revenue of RMB 751.77 billion, up 14% year on year; net profit attributable to equity holders of the company of RMB 224.84 billion, up 16% year on year.Beyond steady growth in its two core businesses—gaming and advertising—the biggest industry talking point in this set of results was the FinTech and Business Services segment, which delivered full-year revenue of RMB 229.43 billion. Notably, Tencent Cloud—which had long been in an investment-heavy phase—achieved scaled profitability for the first time on a full-year basis, alongside an acceleration in year-on-year growth. Tencent also continued to ramp up investment in AI: full-year capital expenditures reached RMB 79.2 billion and R&D spending totaled RMB 85.75 billion, both record highs.The industry had widely assumed that “AI investment comes with heavy losses,” but the numbers in Tencent’s latest report told a different story.According to the data, Tencent’s FinTech and Business Services segment saw its gross margin rise by 4 percentage points year on year to 51% in 2025. The key driver of the improvement in gross profit was no longer low-margin IaaS hardware sales, but rather rising demand for AI-related services:Quarterly enterprise services revenue rose 22%. Tencent Cloud’s Agent Development Platform (ADP) has been deployed across more than 20 industries—including finance, media, retail, and healthcare—creating multiple benchmark application solutions. Its customer base in the culture and media sector grew 13-fold year on year.By the end of 2025, the number of publicly disclosed global AI-related patent applications filed by Tencent exceeded 94,000, providing technical reserves to support subsequent commercialization.C-side products validate the path to implementation; B-side services provide the growth engineWhen it came to product rollouts, Tencent pursued a dual-track strategy, advancing on both the consumer (C-side) and enterprise (B-side) fronts:On the consumer side, Tencent has embedded its AI capabilities into multiple high-frequency apps across its ecosystem. Its strategic AI product Yuanbao surpassed 114 million MAUs, and during the Spring Festival holiday, AI image-generation calls exceeded 1 billion. AI products serving hundreds of millions of users not only accumulate usage data and validate real-world large-model deployment outcomes, but also help educate the consumer market on AI applications.The enterprise side is currently the primary monetization scenario for AI. In response to rapidly growing market demand for agents, Tencent rolled out a product matrix targeting different user segments: the lightweight agent WorkBuddy for small and mid-sized teams; the accompanying SkillHub skills community; “Local Lobster” Qclaw for general users; and ADP, an agent development platform for mid-to-large enterprises, among others.Deployment cases show that after a media organization built an AI content workbench using Tencent Cloud ADP, production efficiency increased by 70%. After a retail company integrated AI agents, end-to-end marketing efficiency improved significantly, with some flagship projects delivering 3.1x the results of manual operations.In its overseas business, Tencent Cloud’s overseas customer base doubled year on year in 2025, and its audio and video products achieved over 70% coverage in the Asia-Pacific OTT market.Unresolved issues amid shifts in the industry landscapeDespite the strong earnings report, against the backdrop of dramatic changes in the industry’s cost structure and competitive logic, Tencent Cloud’s growth still faces two objective challenges:It should be noted that Tencent Cloud’s first full year of scaled profitability is only a phased milestone for its To B business, providing a more solid financial foundation for the long-term growth of subsequent AI-related businesses. However, Tencent’s overall AI business is still in a heavy-investment cycle and has not yet entered a phase of large-scale profitability.Second, rising compute costs are challenging large models. Recently, domestic cloud vendors have raised prices for AI services, signaling the end of the era of “burning money to buy scale.” As the industry pivots fully toward value-based competition, this poses a dual test for Tencent:First, the sustainability of the free consumer (C-end) model. With inference costs remaining elevated, the key to monetization design is how to efficiently convert hundreds of millions of monthly active users into paying customers—and avoid the trap of “the bigger the scale, the heavier the burden.”Second, whether high gross margins can withstand a value test. The current 51% gross margin sits at the high end of the industry. As computing power becomes a “hard cost” rising across the board, enterprise clients will be more sensitive than ever to the return on investment (ROI) of AI services. Tencent needs to prove to the market that the real value created by its solutions is sufficient to justify—and absorb—those rising costs.Overall, Tencent’s latest earnings report indicates that its AI investment has already entered the stage of commercial deployment. Leveraging its consumer traffic ecosystem and accumulated enterprise-service capabilities, Tencent has certain advantages in bringing AI applications to market. However, as the industry as a whole shifts toward higher-quality profitability and compute costs climb, how to balance technology investment, user scale, and commercial returns remains the core challenge it must continue to address. (This article was first published on the TMTPost App. Author | AGI-Signal, Editor | Qin Conghui)更多精彩内容,关注钛媒体微信号(ID:taimeiti),或者下载钛媒体App