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Chinese open-source GLM 5.2 wins enterprise budgets as US export controls gate Anthropic and OpenAI

CryptopolitanJun 27, 2026 12:41 AM
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Zhipu’s GLM 5.2 open-source AI model now sits within a percentage point of Anthropic’s Opus 4.8 on a key agentic benchmark at roughly a fifth of the cost, per CNBC. OpenRouter token traffic for the Chinese model is climbing faster than it did after DeepSeek’s V4 launch in April.

GLM 5.2 went live to Zhipu’s GLM Coding Plan subscribers on June 13, one day after the US Commerce Department forced Anthropic to disable Fable 5 and Mythos 5 globally under the June 12 export-control order.

The 744-billion parameter MoE architecture by Beijing-based Z.ai (former Zhipu AI) uses a 1 million token context window at 300 tokens/second. Z.ai released all open weights and the benchmark scorecard under the MIT license on June 16.

API costs amount to $1.40 input and $4.40 output per million tokens, as compared to the $5 input and $25 output by Anthropic for Opus 4.8. The model comes ready for download, fine-tuning, and self-hosting, which implies that any government cannot take away its access after an organization gets the weights.

GLM 5.2 challenges Anthropic and OpenAI on AI benchmarks

GLM 5.2 scores 81.0 on Terminal-Bench 2.1 against Opus 4.8’s 85.0, a four-point gap. It scores 77.0 on MCP-Atlas, beating Opus 4.8’s 75.3 on tool use. On SWE-bench Pro it scores 62.1, ahead of OpenAI’s GPT-5.5 at 58.6 and its own predecessor GLM-5.1 at 58.4.

On FrontierSWE the gap to Opus 4.8 narrows to roughly one percentage point. On Code Arena, GLM 5.2 ranks #2 at 1,595 points, the strongest model currently usable in the standings since Anthropic’s Fable 5 was removed from rankings following the US export ban. Artificial Analysis placed it at Intelligence Index 51, the highest open-weights score ever recorded, against MiniMax-M3 and DeepSeek V4 Pro at 44 and Kimi K2.6 at 43.

Harvey’s co-founder Gabe Pereyra spoke to CNBC and revealed that GLM 5.2 is the first open model that can compete with closed-source models. As per an AI researcher, Jeremy Howard, the GLM 5.2 model “is at least as good as Opus 4.8 and GPT 5.5.” Software Engineer, Mat Velloso described GLM 5.2 as the first open model to pass his driver test.

The June 12 export ban gave Zhipu its window

The Commerce Department’s June 12 order forced Anthropic to disable Fable 5 and Mythos 5 globally, including for its own non-US staff. Zhipu released GLM 5.2 to coding subscribers on June 13. Z.ai published full benchmarks and open weights on June 16.

The same week, the White House began the GPT-5.6 stagger conversation that culminated in the June 25 customer-by-customer government approval gate the tracker covered in the OpenAI piece. Two of the three US frontier labs now operate under government model-release gates. The third (Google DeepMind) is expected to comply with the same June 2 executive order framework.

Enterprises are running the math in real time. Token spend on Anthropic Opus has strained budgets across legal AI, coding agents, and customer support deployments through 2026. The intelligence per dollar advantage of GLM 5.2 at half the price is significant enough to divert enterprise traffic. According to CNBC, as frontier token expenditures become more difficult for companies’ budgets to accommodate, firms are now asking themselves how to make each dollar count.

Security and data risks remain a concern for GLM 5.2

As Cryptopolitan reported yesterday, Anthropic’s June 10 letter to the Senate Banking Committee documented Alibaba Qwen operators running 28.8 million Claude exchanges through approximately 25,000 fake accounts between April 22 and June 5, 2026, in what Anthropic called the largest campaign ever to extract Claude’s capabilities.

While the US gates Chinese access to Anthropic and OpenAI frontier models, Chinese labs continue distilling capability from those same models through unauthorized channels.

Z.ai‘s cloud API is also subject to China’s National Intelligence Law, raising data routing concerns for enterprises handling sensitive information. US House lawmakers opened a formal inquiry in May into cybersecurity risks posed by PRC-origin AI models in critical infrastructure, naming Zhipu alongside DeepSeek, MiniMax, and ByteDance.

As Cryptopolitan reported on June 16, Vals AI’s independent evaluation showed GLM 5.2 trailing Opus 4.5 by only one percentage point on ProofBench, the closest an open-weight model had come to matching frontier closed-source systems.

 

 

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