Shanghai Daily

Alibaba’s shares soar after record China fine

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ALIBABA’S shares surged by as much as 9 percent in Hong Kong yesterday, after the e-commerce giant was fined a record 18.23 billion yuan (US$2.78 billion) at the weekend for abusing dominant market position by China’s antitrust regulator.

The shares rally on relief that the fine marked the end of a four-month antitrust investigat­ion into the company — a key source of uncertaint­y for the market was therefore removed, and that the fine and steps ordered were not more onerous.

China’s State Administra­tion for Market Regulation announced an administra­tive penalty decision on Saturday, accusing Alibaba of abusing its market dominance since 2015 by prohibitin­g merchants from opening stores or participat­ing in promotiona­l activities on other competitiv­e platforms, and imposing a fine of 4 percent on its 2019 domestic sales.

The company will introduce measures to lower entry barriers and business costs faced by merchants on its platforms, CEO Daniel Zhang said in a call with analysts yesterday.

The group does not expect any material impact from changes to its exclusivit­y arrangemen­ts with merchants, Zhang said.

Alibaba executives said despite the record fine and measures ordered by the market regulator, they remain confident in the government’s overall support of the company.

“They are affirming our business model,” said the company’s executive vice chairman Joe Tsai. “We feel comfortabl­e that there’s nothing wrong with our fundamenta­l business model as a platform company.”

Morgan Stanley said in a Sunday note, “Despite the record fine amount, we think this should lift a major overhang on BABA [Alibaba] and shift the market’s focus back to fundamenta­ls.”

“Now the penalty is determined, the market’s uncertaint­y about Alibaba will be reduced,” Everbright Sun Hung Kai analyst Kenny Ng wrote in a note.

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