Business Day

Alibaba listing to boost bourse

- Lulu Yilun Chen and Carol Zhong

Alibaba Group is planning a listing hearing this week, and is seeking to raise as much as R222bn in a Hong Kong share sale, sources say, moving ahead with the city’s largest first-time stock offering since 2010.

Alibaba Group is planning a listing hearing this week and is seeking to raise as much as $15bn (R222bn) in a Hong Kong share sale, people familiar with the matter say, moving ahead with the city’s largest first-time stock offering since 2010.

Asia’s largest company by market value is now preparing for a hearing as mandated by companies that list on the Hong Kong bourse, the people said, requesting not to be named discussing a private matter.

Alibaba declined to comment in an e-mail.

Alibaba’s listing will be a triumph for a stock exchange that lost many of China’s brightest technology stars to US rivals. The Chinese e-commerce giant had aimed to list as early as mid2019 before pro-democracy protests rocked the city, while trade tension between Washington and Beijing clouded the market’s outlook.

On Thursday, the US and China agreed to roll back tariffs on each other’s goods in phases as they work towards a deal.

Billionair­e Alibaba cofounder Jack Ma is moving towards his dream of listing closer to home — a move that curries favour with Beijing and hedges against trade war risks.

A successful Hong Kong share sale could also help finance a costly war of subsidies with Meituan Dianping in food delivery and travel, and divert investor cash from rivals such as Meituan and WeChat operator Tencent.

It could put the capital to work investing in new technologi­es such as artificial intelligen­ce or fast-expanding affiliates such as Ant Financial.

Courting investors closer to home would serve as a buffer should US-Chinese tensions worsen. Already, US legislator­s such as senator Marco Rubio are agitating for measures to curb investment­s to Chinese companies, including the extreme option of tossing US-listed firms off American bourses.

Alibaba, which had about $57bn of cash and equivalent­s as of June, rode a national ecommerce boom that stemmed from an increasing­ly affluent middle class. But like arch-foe Tencent, it is struggling to sustain growth as the world’s number two economy slows, and China clashes with the US over everything from trade to investment. At home, signs of strain are growing. China’s GDP growth is expected to slump below 6%, which would be the economy’s slowest pace of expansion in three decades.

Still, Alibaba has reported a 40% surge in quarterly revenue, underscori­ng the resilience of consumer spending.

The company on Monday will wrap up its most important sales event of the year — Singles’ Day — offering further clues on the health of consumptio­n.

Alibaba’s decision to proceed came as Hong Kong’s stock exchange reported its worst slide in profit in almost three years.

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