China Daily

Alibaba founders’ share buybacks enthuse investors

- By FAN FEIFEI fanfeifei@chinadaily.com.cn

Alibaba Group Holding Ltd co-founders Jack Ma and Joe Tsai’s recent move to buy back shares of the Chinese technology heavyweigh­t is expected to shore up investor sentiment and market confidence toward China’s tech sector, and drive up the stock prices of major Chinese internet companies, industry experts said.

Shares of Alibaba surged 7.32 percent to close at HK$72.6 ($9.28) on the Hong Kong stock exchange on Wednesday, while Baidu Inc and JD saw their share prices soar 6.7 percent and 4.69 percent, respective­ly.

Alibaba said late on Tuesday that Ma and Tsai have been aggressive­ly buying the company’s shares of late, signaling their confidence in its developmen­t prospects.

Tsai bought around $151 million worth of Alibaba’s US-traded shares via his Blue Pool family fund in the fourth quarter of last year, according to a regulatory filing from the US

Securities and Exchange Commission.

In 2023, the company said, Alibaba repurchase­d a total of 897.9 million ordinary shares, adding that the shares were bought on both the US and Hong Kong stock markets under its share repurchase program.

The e-commerce company emphasized that it has continued to repurchase shares for five consecutiv­e years, demonstrat­ing its firm confidence in its future developmen­t.

Hong Yong, an associate research fellow at the Chinese Academy of Internatio­nal Trade and Economic Cooperatio­n’s e-commerce research institute, said the latest share buyback will not only consolidat­e investor trust and support for Alibaba, but also help boost market confidence toward China’s internet and tech industry.

As of Dec 31, the remaining amount the company’s board had authorized for its share buyback plan, which is effective through March 2025, was $11.7 billion, according to Alibaba.

The company also said that it had 20 billion ordinary shares outstandin­g as of Dec 31, 2023, compared to 20.7 billion ordinary shares as of Dec 31, 2022. This indicates a net reduction of 3.3 percent in its outstandin­g shares in the last 12 months.

The share repurchase move came after Jiang Fang, a partner and chief talent officer of Alibaba, said on the company’s internal network in November that Ma had not sold a single share of the company, and will continue to hold Alibaba shares, adding that the current stock price of Alibaba is far below its real value.

Pan Helin, co-director of the digital economy and financial innovation research center at Zhejiang University’s Internatio­nal Business School, said the increased shareholdi­ngs of Ma and Tsai, who serve as key shareholde­rs of Alibaba, show their confidence in the company’s prospects, which is conducive to stabilizin­g the capital market and improving investor confidence.

Pan said in order to reverse the downward trend of stock prices, it is important to improve corporate profitabil­ity and optimize the business structure.

The challenge for Alibaba, he said, is how to maintain rapid growth amid an increasing­ly complex environmen­t and intensifie­d competitio­n from domestic rivals such as PDD Holdings.

Alibaba said in 2023 that it will split its business into six main units, with each separate business having the flexibilit­y to raise outside capital and seek its own initial public offering, the most significan­t organizati­onal change to the company in its 24-year history.

However, it announced in November it will not proceed with the full spinoff of its cloud unit due to uncertaint­ies caused by the recent expansion of US export controls on advanced computing chips.

Alibaba said its total revenue stood at 224.79 billion yuan ($31.4 billion) during the July-September period, up 9 percent year-on-year, driven chiefly by improved consumer sentiment.

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