South China Morning Post

Alibaba Cloud ‘laying off thousands’ ahead of IPO

- Tracy Qu tracy.qu@scmp.com

Alibaba Cloud, the cloud computing division of e-commerce giant Alibaba Group Holding that is seeking an initial public offering in the next 12 months, is laying off thousands of workers amounting to 7 per cent of its staff, according to people briefed on the matter.

Alibaba, which owns the Post, has not publicly commented on planned lay-offs and did not immediatel­y respond to requests for comment. The move was reported by multiple Chinese media outlets on Tuesday.

Alibaba has been downsizing its payroll for months. Its headcount at the end of March was down by 4,524 people from December to 235,216, according to its first-quarter report. In the past 12 months, Alibaba has cut full-time employees by 19,725, 7.7 per cent of the company.

Alibaba has not disclosed the size of payrolls at individual business units, including its cloud division.

Alibaba will provide compensati­on of at least one month’s pay per year of service, the people briefed on the decision say, as required by Chinese labour law. It is also offering an additional two months of pay for those who leave within one month.

Cloud services have been a promising growth area for the company, but the unit has struggled this year. Alibaba Cloud revenue fell 2 per cent year on year in the first quarter to 18.6 billion yuan (HK$20.6 billion), contributi­ng 9 per cent of the group’s total revenue.

Alibaba chairman Daniel Zhang Yong, who took direct control of Alibaba Cloud in December, attributed the revenue decline to “external changes in the marketing environmen­t and customer compositio­n”.

In a plan unveiled this month, Alibaba will spin off the cloud unit at some point in the next year through a “stock dividend distributi­on to shareholde­rs”, turning its cloud business into an “independen­t, publicly-listed company”.

The tech conglomera­te announced in March its largest-ever corporate restructur­ing.

Under the plan, the company aims to reorganise its sprawling business into six independen­tly run entities, each potentiall­y seeking their own fundraisin­g avenues through initial public offerings.

The company said that it expected the listing of Freshippo, its supermarke­t chain, to be completed in the next six to 12 months, while it was aiming to complete an IPO of Cainiao, its logistics arm, in 12 to 18 months.

Alibaba shares closed down 2.3 per cent in Hong Kong trading yesterday.

 ?? Photo: VCG ?? Alibaba Cloud, whose revenue fell 2 per cent year on year in the first quarter to 18.6 billion yuan, has struggled this year.
Photo: VCG Alibaba Cloud, whose revenue fell 2 per cent year on year in the first quarter to 18.6 billion yuan, has struggled this year.

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