The Star Late Edition

Good buying opportunit­y presented for Alibaba shares

- FRANTS PREIS Frants Preis, CFA, is a portfolio manager at Vega Asset Management based in Pretoria. Alibaba shares are held on behalf of clients.

ALIBABA is the largest online commerce company on earth, reaching 960 million consumers globally, with 780 million of those in China.

China’s online retail market is larger than the next 10 markets combined. A staggering 80 percent of all online purchases in China are executed through Alibaba. Its platforms like Taobao and Alibaba.com facilitate transactio­ns in exchange for a small commission. They do not hold or sell any merchandis­e themselves.

Alibaba’s businesses extend into advertisin­g, cloud computing and logistics. Its stock price has nearly tripled since its initial public offering (IPO) in 2014. However, the trade war, Covid-19 and a potential delisting of Chinese companies listed in the US have strained the share price in recent months, presenting a good buying opportunit­y. By the turn of the 21st century, a commerce-anaemic China was ripe for the picking. With hundreds of millions of cash-flush consumers, Alibaba opened for business at an auspicious time.

A significan­t tailwind came from Chinese government regulation­s. Suspicious of foreign businesses, it imposed strict national internet control, locking foreign competitor­s like Amazon out of the Chinese market. China’s online retail has enormous growth potential as it represents only a quarter of total retail sales in the country. Alibaba benefits from the rise in per-capita income among the Chinese middle class that should enhance consumptio­n appetite.

Alibaba delivered strong numbers in its latest results despite widespread lockdowns in February and March. Total revenue rose 35 percent and gross merchandis­e value surpassed $1 trillion (R16.8trln) for the first time.

The core commerce business is Alibaba’s only profitable business and accounts for 86 percent of revenue. These profits subsidise the growth of the other businesses. The cloud business rose 58 percent on heightened digitisati­on demand. Alibaba also sought to ensure investors that it had no plans to delist after the US Senate passed a bill targeting Chinese stocks.

There is a three-year compliance period after the enactment of the act, allowing ample time for the regulators to negotiate and resolve difference­s. Alibaba is confident that it can comply with any new regulation­s. Furthermor­e, it is likely that influentia­l major US Alibaba shareholde­rs would advise the policymake­rs against moves prejudicia­l to their interests.

Alibaba dominates the largest online market in the world. It benefits from economies of scale and the ability to leverage its user base of nearly a billion. Its diverse revenue streams include commission, fee subscripti­on and selling advertisem­ent space.

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