Alibaba slashes sales outlook as competition bites and demand slows

Chinese firm expects revenue for year ending March to rise 20-23%, its slowest pace since 2014

Chinese shoppers have become more cautious about spending amid coronavirus outbreaks and that, combined with supply disruptions, contributed to slower growth for China’s economy in the quarter. Photograph: Greg Baker/AFP
Chinese shoppers have become more cautious about spending amid coronavirus outbreaks and that, combined with supply disruptions, contributed to slower growth for China’s economy in the quarter. Photograph: Greg Baker/AFP

Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba Group Holding Ltd slashed its forecast for annual revenue growth on increased competition and a regulatory crackdown, sending its stock tumbling 11 per cent.

Alibaba now expects revenue for the year ending in March to rise between 20 per cent and 23 per cent, the slowest pace since its 2014 stock market debut and down from a May forecast of 29.5 per cent growth. The company also undershot expectations for earnings per share in the second quarter.

Chinese shoppers have become more cautious about spending amid coronavirus outbreaks and that, combined with supply disruptions, contributed to slower growth for China’s economy in the quarter.

“These economic headwinds, coupled by intensifying market competition also affected our core commerce business in China,” Alibaba CEO Daniel Zhang said on an earnings call, adding that demand for apparel and general merchandise had been particularly affected.

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But analysts also noted that while Alibaba had been hit by slower-than-expected growth in demand for fashion and accessories, its rivals had done much better in apparel sales.

At the same time, big e-commerce companies in China are having to contend with the expansion into e-commerce from the likes of short video apps Kuaishou and ByteDance’s Douyin and which are now benefiting from unprecedented regulatory efforts to ensure there is more competition in the marketplace.

“We see intensified competition further eating into Alibaba’s market share and widening the difference in revenue growth of Alibaba vs. peers,” Daiwa Capital Markets analysts said in a research note.

JD.com Inc also reported quarterly results on Thursday but exceeded market expectations, sending its shares up 6 per cent.

Revenue and growth

For the quarter ended September 30th, Alibaba earned 11.20 yuan per share on an adjusted basis, missing an average estimate of 12.36 yuan.

Revenue climbed 29 per cent, the smallest rise in six quarters, to 200.7 billion yuan (€27.81 billion), just under a Refintiv consensus estimate.

Alibaba said it had recorded single-digit growth for physical goods gross merchandise value, a key online retailing metric for the total value of merchandise sold through a marketplace, though it did not provide more details or a comparison with previous quarters.

Including Thursday’s losses, Alibaba’s stock has lost a huge 38 per cent so far this year, valuing the company at about $390 billion. Its shares in Hong Kong were down 10.6 per cent on Friday.

Alibaba’s fintech affiliate Ant Group recorded a quarterly profit of about 19.7 billion yuan for the quarter ended June, up 39 per cent. Alibaba records its profit from Ant one quarter in arrears. – Reuters