Los Angeles Times

Alibaba inquiry leads to tech concerns

As Chinese regulators open an antitrust probe, pressure grows on Jack Ma’s company and its compatriot­s.

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Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. stock led a second day of frenetic selling among China’s largest tech f irms, driven by fears that antitrust scrutiny will spread beyond Jack Ma’s internet empire and engulf the country’s most powerful corporatio­ns.

Alibaba and its three largest rivals — Tencent Holdings Ltd., food delivery giant Meituan and JD. com Inc. — have shed nearly $ 200 billion in Hong Kong over the two sessions since Thursday, when regulators revealed an investigat­ion into alleged monopolist­ic practices at Ma’s signature company. That marked the formal start of the Communist Party’s crackdown on not just Alibaba but also, potentiall­y, the wider and increasing­ly inf luential tech sphere.

On Sunday, China’s central bank ordered Ma’s other online titan — Ant Group Co. — to return to its roots as a payments service and overhaul adjacent businesses, including insurance and money management, spurring talk of a breakup.

Once hailed as the standard- bearers of China’s economic and technologi­cal ascendancy, Alibaba and its compatriot­s now face increasing pressure from regulators worried about the speed with which they’re amassing clout in sensitive arenas such as media and education and gaining inf luence over the lives of hundreds of millions of people. That concern crystalliz­ed in November, when regulators torpedoed Ant’s $ 35- billion initial public offering before unveiling draft rules enshrining sweeping powers to clamp down on anti- competitiv­e practices in sectors such as e- commerce and social media.

“The Chinese government is putting more pressure or wants to have more control on the tech f irms,” said Jackson Wong, asset management director at Amber Hill Capital Ltd. “Firms like Alibaba, Tencent or Meituan ... have been growing at a pace deemed by Beijing as too fast and have scales that are too big.”

Baird analyst Colin Sebastian cut his price target on Alibaba’s U. S.- listed shares to $ 285 from $ 325, citing “uncertaint­y around government oversight and potential for direct regulatory action in the coming year,” and wrote in a note: “It is very hard to predict the outcome of the Chinese government’s ongoing investigat­ion into Alibaba and other large consumer internet platforms.”

Alibaba’s American depositary receipts were nearly f lat Monday — ending the day up less than 0.2% after a historic 13% slide the previous session — but volume passed the 12- month daily average in the first half an hour, ref lecting doubt over what’s going to happen next. JD. com fell 3.4% and Tencent declined 3.5%. The day’s Hong Kong trading was also f ierce: Alibaba fell 8% on Monday, shedding $ 270 billion of value since its October peak. Tencent and Meituan both tumbled more than 6%.

KeyBanc Capital Markets wrote that this “significan­t” pullback had created an attractive buying opportunit­y, adding that it doesn’t expect a meaningful­ly different competitiv­e landscape for the company.

It’s unclear what concession­s regulators may try to wring from Alibaba. Under China’s antitrust law — now undergoing revisions to include the internet industry for the f irst time — Beijing can fine violators up to 10% of their revenue. In Alibaba’s case, that could mean a levy of as much as $ 7.8 billion.

On Monday, Alibaba, China’s e- commerce leader, raised a proposed stock buyback program to $ 10 billion from $ 6 billion, effective for two years through the end of 2022. But the program was overwhelme­d by fears that the steps taken against Ant are just the tip of the iceberg. Although China’s central bank stopped short of calling for a breakup of Ant, the f inancial services giant now needs to present specific measures and a timetable for overhaulin­g its business.

The State Administra­tion for Market Regulation dispatched officials to Alibaba’s Hangzhou headquarte­rs Thursday, and the on- site investigat­ion was completed that day, according to local news reports. The People’s Daily — the Communist Party mouthpiece — ran a commentary over the weekend warning Alibaba’s peers to take the antitrust investigat­ion into Alibaba as a chance to lift their own awareness of fair competitio­n.

Ma, the f lamboyant cofounder of Alibaba and Ant, has all but vanished from public view since Ant’s IPO was derailed last month. As of early December, the man most closely identified with the meteoric rise of China Inc. was advised by the government to stay in the country, a person familiar with the matter has said.

Ma isn’t on the verge of a personal downfall, those familiar with the situation have said. His very public rebuke is instead a warning Beijing has lost patience with the outsize power of its technology moguls, increasing­ly perceived as a threat to the political and f inancial stability President Xi Jinping prizes most.

Investors remain divided over the extent to which Beijing will go after Alibaba and its compatriot­s as Beijing prepares to roll out the new anti- monopoly regulation­s. The country’s leaders have said little about how harshly they plan to clamp down or why they decided to act now.

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