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ALIBABA RECORDS FIRST QUARTERLY OPERATING LOSS SINCE IPO

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Alibaba had its first quarterly operating loss since it went public in 2014 after Beijing slapped a record $2.8 billion fine on the nation’s largest e-commerce company for abusing its market position.

The loss tied to the anti-monopoly fine was 7.66 billion yuan ($1,170 million) for the quarter that

ended in March, though revenue growth was 64%, reaching 187.4 billion yuan ($28.6 million). At the opening bell on the NYSE Thursday, shares tumbled more than 6%.

Authoritie­s launched an investigat­ion into Alibaba last year and abruptly halted the

$37 billion initial public offering of shares from its financial affiliate Ant Group as

Beijing grew increasing­ly concerned over the growing influence of technology giants in China.

Beijing has fined multiple technology firms over antitrust violations and has since launched a probe into Alibaba rival Meituan over suspected anti-competitiv­e behavior.

“We have stated that we accept the penalty with sincerity and will ensure our compliance with determinat­ion,” said Alibaba chairman and CEO Daniel Zhang in an earnings call Thursday.

“The penalty decision motivated us to reflect on the relationsh­ip between a platform economy and society as well as our social responsibi­lities and commitment­s,” he said.

The company said Thursday that it expects revenue in this fiscal year, which ends in

March 2022, to grow by more than 30%, reaching over 930 billion yuan ($144 billion). That is better than most industry analysts are expecting.

It also reported a total of 811 million annual active users for the quarter ended March. Alibaba Group Holding’s New York-listed stock has fallen 14% since Beijing announced that its investigat­ion into the company.

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