National Post (National Edition)

Alibaba takes stake in China’s ‘Twitter’

Weibo valued at more than US$3B

- By Sayantani Ghosh

Chinese e-commerce firm Alibaba Group acquired an 18% stake in Web portal Sina Corp.’ s microblogg­ing service Weibo in its first big move into selling advertisin­g on China’s highly competitiv­e social networks.

The US$586-million deal Monday, which values Weibo at over US$3-billion, will provide more advertisin­g revenue to Weibo as Sina tries to monetize the service and increase its lead over rival Tencent Holdings Ltd.’s social messaging product, WeChat.

The deal, seen by analysts as generously priced, should drive more Web traffic to Alibaba’s Taobao Marketplac­e, China’s largest e-commerce website with a consumer focus.

Alibaba is tipped to go public within the next year.

Weibo, China’s version of Twitter, has grown at a fast clip since its launch in 2009 and has gained from the blockage of Twitter by the Chinese government.

More than 500 million Chinese use Weibo to opine on everything from Korean soap operas to China’s latest political intrigue.

“[The stake purchase] is an endorsemen­t from Alibaba ... of the value of Sina’s Weibo platform,” Morningsta­r analyst Dan Su said. “This indicates the tremendous value of the data that is present on the Weibo platform that can be mined for a lot of activities, such as e-commerce.”

Unlisted Alibaba, controlled by charismati­c Chinese Internet entreprene­ur Jack Ma, also runs Alibaba.com, the country’s largest businessto-business commerce platform, and Alipay, a PayPal-like online payment platform.

Mr. Ma, one of China’s best known corporate leaders, reckoned to be worth US$3.4billion by Forbes late last year, built his e-commerce empire from scratch.

He plans to step down as chief executive on May 10 and become executive chairman. Alibaba is likely to go public in a listing in Hong Kong that could value the company at about US$100-billion, according to industry sources.

Alibaba has kept mum about its initial public offering plans, but its listing will likely be a windfall for Yahoo Inc., which owns nearly a quarter of the company.

Some analysts, who had val- ued Weibo between US$600million and US$2.5-billion, said the deal offered by Alibaba was generous.

“We believe this deal is very positive for Sina. It instantly gives pricing to Sina Weibo with a valuation of US$3.26billion; the per share base could be US$48,” T.H. Capital Research analyst Tian Hou said.

“Sina’s resource consolidat­ion with Alibaba Group, which has a huge dominant position in China’s e-commerce, can escalate Weibo’s developmen­t,” she said.

Sina, which makes most of its revenue from online advertisin­g both on its website and Weibo, has had investors worried as the growth rate of Chinese online advertisin­g slows. Its shares have slipped 15% in the past 12 months.

Maxim Group analyst Echo He said the Alibaba deal would help Sina in the longer term, but giving Sina cash would not solve its problems and its valuation would still depend on its own profitabil­ity.

This is not the first time Sina has tied up with a major Chinese company to seek new streams of revenue.

Sina allied with Baidu Inc. last year, integratin­g Baidu search in its mobile website, while Baidu said its cloud initiative would come with the Weibo app pre-installed.

Sina’s Weibo website is displayed on a computer in Beijing.

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NELSON CHING / BLOOMBERG NEWS FILES

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