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Alibaba shows how tough it is to kick a habit

- By TIM CULPAN Tim Culpan is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist covering technology in Asia. The views expressed here are the writer’s own.

SLOWING growth and a rise in corporate spending have spurred global technology companies to boost revenue from non-consumer offerings. Apple Inc, Microsoft Corp, Amazon.com Inc and Taiwan Semiconduc­tor Manufactur­ing Co (TSMC) are among those who’ve built solid business models around the rise in cloud services.

Alibaba Group Holding Ltd has failed to follow the trend, and looks unlikely to do so anytime soon.

Despite billions of dollars and years of investment into cloud, logistics, and digital media and entertainm­ent, the Chinese tech giant remains entirely reliant on its 20-yearold business model of ecommerce marketing and sales.

While management is adept at extracting money from selling goods, it’s yet to work out how to reproduce that success in online services

Ever since listing in New York in 2014, Alibaba has consistent­ly posted operating losses from its collection of non-commerce businesses.

The only bright spot was a 598 million yuan (Us$89 mil or Rm397 mil) profit from the cloud unit in the March quarter of this year.

But that quickly evaporated in the June quarter when it slumped back to a 1.3 billion yuan (Rm857.4 mil) loss.

Alibaba, which was founded in 1999, has always leaned heavily on two pillars of its ecommerce model.

The largest contributo­r has traditiona­lly been marketing services – which it also calls customer management – where the company charges merchants on its platform a fee to elevate their products higher in search results, or to deliver ads to prospectiv­e shoppers.

The company also takes a commission on sales, and more recently has entered into physical retail including groceries and hypermarke­ts.

Collective­ly, this sector has delivered more than 800 billion yuan (Rm528 bil) in profit over the past seven years, according to Bloomberg Opinion calculatio­ns.

But the non-ecommerce business has been a drag, losing over Us$51bil (Rm227 bil) in the same period, with its local consumer services division – which includes online groceries and food deliveries – being the biggest contributo­r to that shortfall.

The cloud division, which allows customers and consumers to store data on Alibaba’s servers, ought to be a money-maker. Instead, it posted an average operating loss margin of 15% since starting to report data from the 2016 fiscal year.

Amazon, by contrast, made Us$18.5 bil (Rm82.5 bil) in operating profit from its Amazon Web Services business last year alone, with a margin of 30%.

Microsoft has also made a successful transition away from reliance on Windows and Offices products to garner Us$32 bil (Rm142.7 bil), or 39% of total income last year, from its intelligen­t cloud business with a margin of 43%.

Alibaba continues to lose money from all the businesses that don’t revolve around selling goods online, including cloud services and entertainm­ent.

Even Apple, better known for selling iphones, gets 23% of revenue from services including Apple Music, App Store and icloud.

That division posted the company’s strongest growth last quarter. It doesn’t provide a profit breakdown by unit.

Even semiconduc­tor giant TSMC last month told investors that it expects customers who provide cloud and other services to be the major driver of chip demand, showing that hardware makers are also finding ways to profit from non-consumer products.

Cloud isn’t the only drag. Alibaba’s Cainiao logistics business helps deliver products to consumers and gives the company an advantage over competitor­s, but continues to lose money.

Management may feel that such a loss is acceptable if it ensures the core business stays ahead of rivals Jd.com and Pinduoduo Inc. If that’s the case, then investors will need to adjust their expectatio­ns accordingl­y.

Shareholde­rs will also have to get used to the notion that Alibaba’s move into entertainm­ent may fail to be a money-maker, too.

Unlike Netflix Inc, which has been profitable for at least 15 years, Alibaba’s content

business, which includes streaming service Youku and production company Alibaba Pictures Group, continues to drag down earnings and shows no signs of being able to deliver consistent income.

With China’s consumer economy heaving peaked, Alibaba is going to need to find new sources of earnings growth. History shows it hasn’t found one yet.

 ?? — Bloomberg ?? Loss-making: The mascot for Alibaba’s Taobao ecommerce platform at the company’s affiliated hotel in Hangzhou. The tech giant recorded its first-ever decline in quarterly revenue – one of the few major Chinese Internet corporatio­ns to do so.
— Bloomberg Loss-making: The mascot for Alibaba’s Taobao ecommerce platform at the company’s affiliated hotel in Hangzhou. The tech giant recorded its first-ever decline in quarterly revenue – one of the few major Chinese Internet corporatio­ns to do so.

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