Economy

DeepSeek: Who is Liang Wenfeng?

An outlier

Liang was born in 1985 in Zhanjiang, an economically poor city in China’s southern Guangdong province. His father was an elementary school teacher. He studied electronic engineering at Zhejiang University, a prestigious college in the city of Hangzhou, and also earned a master’s degree in information and communication engineering there.

High-Flyer was as much an outlier in China’s quant industry as DeepSeek is to the global AI industry.

Liang and two of his former university classmates started dabbling in domestic stocks in 2008. Unlike the founders of most Chinese quant funds, none of them had overseas or institutional trading experience.

The trio tried different strategies from discretionary trading to arbitrage, before settling on using a systematic approach to implement trading ideas in 2015, the year they set up High-Flyer. They initially built a model based on price-and-volume factors, before trying machine learning in 2016.

The new tool allowed the firm to dig deeper to find new factors and identify “non-lineal” connections between factors, its chief executive officer Simon Lu said in an interview in 2020. The founders integrated machine learning into High-Flyer products in 2018.

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AI allowed High-Flyer to achieve “a lot of innovations” and develop a multi-strategy, multi-cycle investment model to “pile up” returns from different sources of returns, according to a 2020 brochure for the firm. Its flagship product benchmarked against the CSI 500 Index integrated low-risk strategies like intra-day trading, allowing it to beat the gauge by a combined 120 percentage points in the previous three years, it showed.

High-Flyer grew assets quickly as a result, reaching more than 90 billion yuan in 2021 before it stumbled later that year.

In December 2021, after experiencing record drawdowns at some funds, High-Flyer said its artificial intelligence mistimed some trades and performed poorly during periods of large stock swings. “We feel deeply guilty,” it told investors. The firm also stopped accepting fresh inflows and said it would reduce its assets under management and adjust its strategies.

Three months later, its marketing head warned that certain volatility-sensitive clients should redeem their money — a highly unusual move.

Last year, High-Flyer said it would wind down products that had made two-way bets on the markets, and focus on “long-only” strategies in which it took only bullish positions on stocks. Its assets under management have dropped to around 60 billion yuan.

The research hub

DeepSeek’s research was funded by High-Flyer’s R&D budget, Liang said previously. It drew computing resources from the quant fund, which had amassed 10,000 Nvidia GPUs in 2021, prior to US bans on exports of sophisticated Nvidia chips and other graphics processing units.

Liang recruited engineering talent almost exclusively from China. Many were fresh out of top universities, interns in their final leg of doctoral studies and Olympiad medal holders.

“He’s a nerd but nerd in this context is not a negative,” said Zihan Wang, a Ph.D. student at Northwestern University who did a six-month internship at DeepSeek in 2024.

Liang has been compared to OpenAI founder Sam Altman, but the Chinese citizen keeps a much lower profile and seldom speaks publicly.Credit: Getty Images

Wang said Liang ran many experiments on his own, and DeepSeek operated much like a research lab. “It started small, but as they got real progress, they started to get excited,” he said.

The startup began periodically releasing models, seemingly impervious to — even stirred up by — the US ban on exports of cutting-edge AI accelerator chips.

DeepSeek released its R1 advanced AI reasoning model on January 20, the same day Donald Trump was sworn in as America’s 47th president.

Earlier that Monday, Liang attended a closed-door business symposium in Beijing that was hosted by Chinese Premier Li Qiang. There, experts in technology, science, education and other fields offered their opinions and suggestions for a draft government work report, according to the official Xinhua news agency. Video footage on YouTube shows Liang sitting across the table from Li and speaking, with the Chinese leader nodding attentively.

Significantly, DeepSeek open sourced its R1, allowing researchers and developers to freely use, modify and commercialise the model. That sent a signal that it wants to collaborate and innovate with others in the global AI community.

Liang stands out among Chinese entrepreneurs because of that non-commercial goal, his laser-focus on research and the realisation of Artificial General Intelligence, said Thomas Qitong Cao, assistant professor of technology policy at Tufts University.

Liang is assumed to own 51 per cent of High-Flyer. That would give him a stake worth $US71 million based on a comparative analysis, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires’ Index. If DeepSeek reaches the same potential as OpenAI, valued at roughly $US150 billion, the founder could potentially be in line for a massive windfall.

Some have questioned whether Liang’s DeepSeek is as promising as it appears. Shortcomings include the startup’s infrastructure’s ability to handle global traffic waiting to try its service, or the app’s handling of sensitive subjects such as the 1989 protests in Tiananmen Square and queries on Chinese leader Xi Jinping.

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Experts have also questioned the assumption that DeepSeek was building with 10,000 A100 Nvidia chips, with analysts like Dylan Patel speculating that DeepSeek needs at least 50,000 of Nvidia’s far-more powerful chips, the H100s. Meta for instance, operates the equivalent of 600,000 Nvidia H100s.

Still, Liang is prompting a rethink and re-calibration in the global AI ecosystem. It’s made obvious that the “The AI race won’t be won by creating the most sophisticated model; it’ll be won by embedding AI into business systems to generate tangible economic value,” said Mike Capone, chief executive officer of Qlik, a data analytics and artificial intelligence platform.

Bloomberg

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  • Source of information and images “brisbanetimes”

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