Key TakeawaysThe XuanTie C950 represents Alibaba’s latest 5nm AI chip using RISC-V architecture, delivering more than triple the performance of previous generationMorgan Stanley maintains Overweight stance with $180 target, designating BABA as a “Top Pick” in its coverageNative compatibility includes major AI models such as Qwen3 and DeepSeek V3T-Head semiconductor division valued between $28B and $86B by Morgan Stanley, representing approximately $22 per shareAnalyst consensus points to Strong Buy with $188.38 average target priceAlibaba Group Holding introduced its latest proprietary AI processor this week, prompting Morgan Stanley to double down on its positive outlook for the tech giant’s shares.Alibaba Unveils New Chip Design to Meet Surging Demand for AIAlibaba Group’s Damo Academy unveiled the XuanTie C950, a RISC-V CPU for agentic AI and inference computing, optimized for cloud use and customizable for clients. The launch advances Alibaba’s all-stack AI ambitions,… pic.twitter.com/3OfkL2TeNx— CN Wire (@Sino_Market) March 24, 2026Dubbed the XuanTie C950, this processor leverages 5-nanometer manufacturing technology and open-source RISC-V design principles. Performance benchmarks show it operating at speeds exceeding three times those of Alibaba’s earlier generation chips, while offering native integration with prominent large language models like Qwen3 and DeepSeek V3.The processor emerged from Alibaba’s T-Head semiconductor division, a strategic asset the company has been developing behind the scenes for several years. This internal chip development capacity now forms a cornerstone of Morgan Stanley’s bullish thesis.Morgan Stanley’s Gary Yu maintained his Overweight recommendation while keeping the $180 price objective intact. Yu emphasized that the chip validates his assessment of Alibaba’s comprehensive control across critical AI infrastructure components.Shares of BABA were changing hands at $126.06 when the analyst note was published, reflecting a 7.7% decline from the previous week.Alibaba Group Holding Limited, BABAStrategic Implications of In-House Chip DevelopmentMorgan Stanley’s thesis centers on a clear premise: proprietary semiconductor capabilities reduce Alibaba‘s reliance on external chip vendors. This vertical integration delivers cost advantages, enables rapid capacity expansion during demand surges, and mitigates risks from U.S. technology export restrictions.The processor forms the foundation of what Morgan Stanley characterizes as Alibaba’s comprehensive AI ecosystem. Building upward from this foundation are AliCloud’s computational infrastructure, the open-weight Qwen model suite, and various consumer and enterprise applications.Recent product launches include Wukong, an AI-first enterprise platform featuring autonomous agent functionality, alongside the Alibaba Token Hub. Morgan Stanley believes these offerings position the company to monetize AI capabilities more effectively going forward.Financial Analysis and Street SentimentMorgan Stanley employs a sum-of-the-parts methodology yielding a midpoint valuation of $245 for Alibaba. The T-Head semiconductor business alone contributes $22 per share to this calculation, based on an estimated value range spanning $28 billion to $86 billion.BABA currently trades at a price-to-earnings multiple of 21.82 with a market capitalization hovering around $281.8 billion. The company maintains a net cash position on its balance sheet.Wall Street analysts have established a Strong Buy consensus on BABA, supported by eight Buy recommendations and one Hold rating issued over the last three months.The mean price objective among covering analysts stands at $188.38, suggesting potential upside of approximately 49% from the stock’s level when Morgan Stanley published its research.Alibaba’s latest quarterly performance fell short of market expectations. December quarter revenue reached RMB284.8 billion, representing a 2% year-over-year increase, or 9% growth excluding divested operations. This figure nonetheless missed consensus estimates by 2%.In response to those results, Jefferies reduced its price target from $225 to $212, while Mizuho adjusted downward from $195 to $190. Both firms retained Buy-equivalent ratings. Conversely, US Tiger Securities elevated BABA from Hold to Buy with a $175 target, citing artificial intelligence and cloud computing tailwinds.BofA Securities preserved its Buy rating alongside a $180 price objective, similarly highlighting Alibaba’s AI infrastructure investments.The post Alibaba (BABA) Stock Gains Morgan Stanley’s Confidence With New AI Chip Launch appeared first on Blockonomi.