Chinese AI firm SenseTime cuts back on Singapore office space, sources say
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SenseTime launched an AI innovation hub at Frasers Tower in Singapore in 2021.
PHOTO: SENSETIME
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Singapore - SenseTime Group is reducing its office footprint in Singapore, scaling back once-lofty ambitions at a time it is struggling to compete in the post-ChatGPT era.
The Chinese artificial intelligence (AI) pioneer is moving from a prime downtown location to a smaller office in a less expensive neighbourhood, people familiar with the matter said.
The company is giving up a roughly 11,000 sq ft space in Frasers Tower in Cecil Street for a less central building, the people said, asking to remain unidentified discussing private decisions.
Representatives for the company in Singapore did not respond to requests for comment.
SenseTime is downsizing at a time fellow tech firms including ByteDance are expanding abroad, seeking to escape an economic downturn back home.
The retreat underscores how SenseTime, which in 2023 lost Alibaba Group Holding as a financial backer, is grappling with new rivals in a crowded AI arena.
It also reflects the changing fortunes of Singapore’s prime office market, which has benefited from expansions from deep-pocketed Chinese firms in recent years.
That is now softening as companies cut costs and real estate supply rises.
Prime office vacancies in the Central Business District fell to 6.9 per cent in the last quarter of 2024, but that is after jumping to their highest levels in more than two years in the previous three months, according to data from consultancy Jones Lang LaSalle.
Just a few years ago, SenseTime joined a wave of firms expanding in Singapore, which was emerging from Covid-19 controls faster than China.
The firm launched what it called an AI innovation hub in Singapore in 2021 and said it planned to triple staffing to about 300 within three years.
SenseTime – one of China’s first to win approval for generative AI services in 2024 – is now undergoing a restructuring to refocus on that newer field.
But it will be competing with larger companies as well as a new generation of well-funded start-ups like Moonshot AI and Zhipu.
Once lauded for breaking ground in areas such as facial recognition, the Chinese firm’s growth began to slow after the US in 2019 blacklisted the company on allegations related to human rights violations in Xinjiang.
That restricted its access to capital and crucial US components, later compounded by curbs on the sale of advanced AI chips and chipmaking equipment to Chinese firms.
SenseTime has said the accusations are unfounded. BLOOMBERG

