A new, inexpensive Chinese AI model is catching up with Anthropic, OpenAI on their home turf

Published July 2, 2026 Updated July 2, 2026 06:45pm
OpenAI and Anthropic logos are seen in this illustration taken June 11, 2026. — Reuters
OpenAI and Anthropic logos are seen in this illustration taken June 11, 2026. — Reuters

Since DeepSeek shocked markets early last year with its cheap but powerful AI model, global consumers have been faced with a choice: Chinese offerings with lower prices and less capability or OpenAI or Anthropic, which have poured ​billions into development.

A model called GLM-5.2, launched last month by Beijing-based startup Z.ai, may finally be closing that gap in terms of Western interest.

GLM-5.2 has Silicon Valley buzzing with its coding and ‌agent capabilities, or the ability to execute complex tasks with minimal prompting, that almost rival leading US offerings at a fraction of the cost, in what some experts are calling a “mini DeepSeek moment.”

It has quickly climbed the usage charts on third-party AI developer platforms like OpenRouter, where it now ranks above Anthropic’s models, while executives from cloud data platform Snowflake’s CEO Sridhar Ramaswamy to venture capitalist Marc Andreessen have lauded its abilities.

“We now have a Chinese open-weight model that is as good as the currently available models ​from OpenAI and Anthropic,” said David Sacks, US President Donald Trump’s former AI czar, last week before Washington lifted curbs on Anthropic’s Fable and Mythos models on Tuesday.

Those capabilities have put Z.ai’s GLM-5.2 model ​at the heart of a growing debate about whether China is finally catching up to the US in the AI race, as technology executives warn that Washington’s unpredictable ⁠regulation of the industry risks hampering its lead in the frontier technology.

“It is just a tick below Opus 4.8 (from Anthropic) and right up there with GPT 5.5 (from OpenAI),” Sacks said of GLM-5.2 on the All-In podcast, adding ​that “we cannot afford to do things that slow our companies down.”

The Anthropic curbs and the delayed public rollout of OpenAI’s latest GPT-5.6 model have fueled global demand for the Chinese model, some experts said.

“The international developer community is increasingly ​aware that relying solely on proprietary, US-based API models carries significant risk,” said Brian Tse, founder and CEO of Concordia AI, a Beijing-based consultancy focused on AI safety.

GLM-5.2’s positive global reception also suggests increased interest in cheaper open-source development because businesses are getting stung by the rising and often unpredictable costs of using AI to complete tasks, as closed-source agentic AI tools consume more tokens, the units used to measure AI usage.

Z.ai, also known as Zhipu AI, declined to comment. Anthropic and OpenAI did not immediately ​respond to requests for comment.

GLM-5.2 currently holds fifth place on Artificial Analysis’ large language model (LLM) intelligence leaderboard, which ranks performance across a range of benchmarks designed to measure overall capability, including reasoning and coding skills.

And it ​is in the second spot on Code Arena’s front-end coding rankings, measuring how well models generate websites and front-end applications, while operating at roughly a sixth of the cost of closed US frontier models like Claude and the GPT series.

Z.ai has ‌not disclosed how ⁠much it spent to develop GLM-5.2.

In a reply to Elon Musk on X last month, Z.ai founder Tang Jie said that the Chinese startup could produce a model on par with Anthropic’s Fable before the first quarter of next year.

“The shift GLM-5.2 brings is that the open-source model has become a plug-and-play, out-of-the-box product,” said Tiezhen Wang, former APAC lead at Hugging Face, a startup that serves as a hub for developers tinkering with open-source models.

“You just deploy the model and without doing any complex fine-tuning systems, it is in a highly usable, ready-to-use state. This drastically lowers the barrier to entry for open-source adoption.”

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