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Alibaba takes control of loss-making delivery unit

Billions to be spent on expanding Cainiao’s shipping network

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HONG KONG: Alibaba Group Holding Ltd will buy control of unprofitab­le delivery business Cainiao for 5.3 billion yuan (US$800mil) and spend billions of dollars more to expand a shipping network that spans the world’s largest e-commerce market.

China’s largest web marketplac­e agreed to increase its stake in Cainiao Smart Logistics Network Ltd to 51%.

Under the deal, Alibaba planned to consolidat­e Cainiao’s financials into its own books, eroding Alibaba’s bottom line, and would get an additional seat on Cainiao’s board, taking its representa­tion to four out of seven seats, the company said in a statement.

The company co-founded by Jack Ma is taking control of a little-known but rapidly growing business run with partners that sits at the heart of Alibaba’s expansion – both in China and abroad.

It oversees a coterie of more than a dozen shipping partners, orchestrat­ing deliveries carried out by about two million people across more than 600 cities.

Cainiao’s operation had enabled Alibaba to maintain what it called an asset-light model that eschewed expensive warehouse constructi­on.

Now that Alibaba’s taking control, it plans to consolidat­e Cainiao’s financials under its own books and is committing to spend another 100 billion yuan over the next five years to further expand the network.

That will help address US regula- tors’ questions about why Cainiao, of which Alibaba owned 47%, wasn’t previously included. But it also takes Alibaba deeper into the business of setting up and controllin­g its own infrastruc­ture, much like Amazon.com Inc.

The unit made a net loss of 2.2 billion yuan in calendar 2016, tripling from 2015. Revenue, however, also tripled, to 9.4 billion yuan.

“They’re realising that it’s much more capital-intensive than they expected to build this out,” said Christophe­r Balding, an associate professor at the HSBC School of Business at Peking University in Shenzhen.

“Right now they are essentiall­y obligating themselves to report profit and loss on the income statement every quarter, which they probably should have been doing.”

Alibaba created Cainiao with the department-store chain Intime Retail Group Co and industrial conglomera­te Fosun Internatio­nal Ltd. The trio led an initial investment of 100 billion yuan into the company to build out its logistics network.

The company has since managed a delicate relationsh­ip with its delivery partners, as players jostled for business and valuable user data. — Bloomberg

 ??  ?? Raising stake: A logo of Cainiao is seen outside its industrial park in Jinhua, Zhejiang province. Alibaba has agreed to increase its stake in Cainiao to 51%. — Reuters
Raising stake: A logo of Cainiao is seen outside its industrial park in Jinhua, Zhejiang province. Alibaba has agreed to increase its stake in Cainiao to 51%. — Reuters

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