Published 13:57 IST, November 6th 2020

Alibaba revenue up 30% as virus drives demand for e-commerce

China’s biggest e-commerce firm Alibaba Group Holding on Thursday reported a 30% jump in quarterly revenue, as China recovers from the virus and online shopping demand remains high.

Follow: Google News Icon
  • share
null | Image: self
Advertisement

China’s biggest e-commerce firm Alibaba Group Holding on Thursday reported a 30% jump in quarterly revenue, as China recovers from virus and online shopping demand remains high.

Alibaba reported revenues of 155.1 billion yuan ($23.4 billion) for three months ended September. Its profit was down 60% to 28.8 billion yuan ($4.4 billion) compared to same time last year, when it reported a one-time gain after it took a 33% stake in its financial affiliate Ant Group.

Advertisement

company saw its stock plunge nearly 10% in Hong Kong on Wednesday, following a 8.1% fall in New York on Tuesday, after Chinese regulators on Tuesday suspended initial public offering of Ant Group on Shanghai stock market just days before its trading debut.

Regulators halted IPO, stating that regulatory environment had changed significantly and that Ant Group may thus t meet listing qualifications or disclosure requirements. On Monday, China had released draft rules for microlenders, raising minimum required capital for lenders such as Ant to 5 billion yuan ($750 million).

Advertisement

Ant Group, which was initially set to become world’s biggest IPO with a share sale of at least $34.5 billion, anunced shortly after that it would also halt its Hong Kong listing.

“As Ant Group's major shareholder, Alibaba is actively evaluating impact on our business in response to recent proposed change in fintech regulatory environment, and will take appropriate measures accordingly,” said Daniel Zhang, chairman and CEO of Alibaba, on an earnings call with analysts and media.

Advertisement

Ahead of earnings results, Alibaba’s stock closed up 6.28% at 294.60 Hong Kong dollars ($38) on Thursday, up about 40% since beginning of this year.

Hangzhou-based company is also gearing up for its upcoming Singles’ Day online shopping festival, held annually on v. 11. shopping festival is world’s largest, with consumers spending $38.4 billion over a period of 24 hours last year, topping Black Friday and Cyber Monday sales in U.S.

Advertisement

This year, consumers are expected to spend tens of billions of dollars during Singles’ Day on its Taobao and Tmall e-commerce platforms on everything from luxury goods to fresh food.

(Im Credit: AP)

Advertisement

13:57 IST, November 6th 2020