
Zhipu‘s GLM 5.2 artificial intelligence model landed last week with the kind of Silicon Valley buzz that followed DeepSeek‘s launch last year.
The Chinese AI startup‘s new open source model has blown past every other open release and now sits within a percentage point of Anthropic‘s Opus 4.8 on one closely watched agentic benchmark, at roughly a fifth of the cost.
Developers are piling in, with OpenRouter token traffic climbing faster than it did after DeepSeek’s V4 launch in April. And unlike DeepSeek, which the market eventually dismissed as a one-off chatbot shock, GLM 5.2 is strong at agentic work like planning, coding, testing, and looping, the kind of work that enterprises are racing to automate.
Companies hit by unexpectedly high AI spend on tokens, the measure of the data processed and generated by AI models, are now asking how to get the most for their money.
The most important metric is becoming intelligence per dollar, making Zhipu’s cheap-but-good-enough model an attractive answer.
“I’ve been consistently surprised by how quickly the open source has caught up,” Gabe Pereyra, co-founder of Harvey, told CNBC. “GLM 5.2, you’re seeing the first model where it’s really competitive with some of these closed-source frontier models.”
But the real story underneath the price tag is the open source AI moment.
GLM 5.2 is free to download, fine-tune, and run on an enterprise’s own servers, putting pricing pressure on frontier labs at the same time that access looks shaky. Anthropic had to pull its Fable Mythos-class model after an order by the Trump administration, and OpenAI announced Friday that it is limiting its GPT 5.6 models because of a government request.
The federal oversight has made a model that no one can revoke increasingly look like the safer bet.






