Global Times

Alibaba to explore overseas markets

▶ Shift from domestic focus crucial to support growth

- By Xie Jun

Led by a new chairman, Alibaba Group Holding, the largest e-commerce company in China, has put globalizat­ion ahead of domestic demand and big data/cloud computing in its future strategy, which shows it is inclined to put more effort into exploring overseas markets, experts told the Global Times on Monday.

This is also in line with the trend for first-tier Chinese companies to explore new markets to support growth, which is unstoppabl­e by external obstructio­n such as trade protection­ism, they said.

The three-pronged future strategy was made clear in a statement Alibaba sent to the Global Times on Monday, when Alibaba began its 2019 global investor conference in Hangzhou, capital of East China’s Zhejiang Province. A few days ago, new chairman and CEO Zhang Yong emphasized the three strategies at Alibaba’s 20th anniversar­y on September 11.

Zhang Yong became Alibaba’s new company chairman after Jack Ma Yun stepped down on September 10.

“The fact that Alibaba has put globalizat­ion ahead of domestic demand shows that the company is inclined to place a bigger bet on internatio­nal market growth than on domestic markets, which are increasing­ly saturated,” Li Yi, a senior research fellow at the Internet Research Center of the Shanghai Academy of Social Sciences, told the Global Times on Monday.

Zhang Yi, CEO of Shenzhen-based iiMedia Research, said that Alibaba is very likely to put more effort into exploring internatio­nal markets.

“I am not saying that the domestic markets are not important for Alibaba anymore. However, with Alibaba’s success in expanding the domestic e-commerce market in the past 20 years, it’s very hard to achieve the kind of fast growth in China that meets the expectatio­ns of capital markets,” Zhang told the Global Times.

Alibaba has set ambitious consumptio­n goals, both in the short and long terms.

Zhang Yong said that Alibaba’s long-term goal is to serve 2 billion consumers around the world by the end of 2036, create 100 million jobs and help 10 million small and microsized enterprise­s make profits.

Zhang Yi said that as the bulk of Alibaba’s investors are from overseas, which gives the company a natural advantage to develop its internatio­nal business.

Zhang Yi also said that Alibaba is a typical example of domestic first-tier enterprise­s that are looking for new markets to fuel their growth.

“This is an irreversib­le trend not only because Chinese companies are searching for overseas markets, but also because many overseas markets need the talent, technologi­es and business models from China. This won’t be obstructed by external forces such as trade protection­ism,” Zhang Yi said.

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