Alibaba's revenue jumps but investments to prolong margin squeeze

Reuters  |  BEIJING 

By Cate Cadell

U.S.-listed shares of Asia's most valuable public company rose early on Thursday but then erased gains to end the day down 3 percent.

While Alibaba makes money from its core businesses, including Tmall and Taobao and payment platform Alipay, it also has far flung investments in sports content, microchips and

"As Alibaba continues to invest in New Retail initiatives, the consolidation of lower margin businesses such as Cainiao, Ele.me, and Lazada is shifting the long term margin profile of the core business," Baird said in a note.

"We expect management's ongoing focus on New Retail market share will continue to be a profitability headwind for the foreseeable future," said Sebastian, cutting his price target on the stock by $5 to $215.

In April-June, Alibaba's gross margin was 11 percent versus 29.2 percent a year earlier, the lowest since the company's 2014 stock exchange listing. Profit margins at Alibaba are typically well above 20 percent.

On Thursday, the company said it had formed a holding company for its delivery platform Ele.me and and firm Koubei, for which it had received over $3 billion in new investment commitments, including from and Alibaba itself.

Quarterly net profit at Alibaba, led by China's second-richest man Jack Ma, plunged 41 percent, hurt by a one-time charge for stock-based compensation paid to employees to account for a jump in valuation of its affiliate

Without the charge, Alibaba said its net income would have risen by 33 percent from the year-ago period. Excluding one-off items, the company earned 8.04 yuan per share, or $1.22 per share, missing the average estimate of 8.15 yuan per share.

Ant Financial, China's largest company, is controlled by Ma and has a profit sharing agreement with Alibaba. It announced a $14 billion fundraising in June, which valued it at around $150 billion.

Ant Financial, which is expanding rapidly into foreign markets, is locked in a costly battle for market share at home with WeChat Pay, owned by Alibaba's arch rival Tencent Holdings Ltd.

ACCELERATING REVENUE GROWTH

Shares of Alibaba, which has a market value of about $446 billion, are nearly flat so far this year, including Thursday's losses, compared with a 14 percent rise in the tech-heavy Index.

But Alibaba's core business is still growing strongly at a time when the broader Chinese economy is slowing amid a trade tariff war with the

It has been pushing into brick-and-mortar to complement its business and stay ahead of JD.com Inc, backed by Tencent.

Both JD.com and Tencent reported slower revenue growth in the latest quarter. Tencent was hurt by weak gaming revenue, while JD.com said that a slump in summer sales hurt profit.

Sales at Alibaba's core business swelled 61 percent to 69.2 billion yuan. Total June quarter sales jumped 61 percent as well to 80.9 billion yuan ($11.77 billion). Analysts expected 80.7 billion yuan, according to I/B/E/S.

Revenue in Alibaba's business nearly doubled to 4.7 billion yuan, while entertainment unit revenue rose 46.4 percent to 6 billion yuan.

($1 = 6.8740 Chinese yuan renminbi)

(Reporting by Catherine Cadell; Additional reporting by Arjun Panchadar in Bengaluru; Writing by Sayantani Ghosh; Editing by and Muralikumar Anantharaman)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Fri, August 24 2018. 15:19 IST