Alibaba earnings report showed solid growth of around 14%, showing Alibaba revenue growth most since Sept. 2021. Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba’s revenue growth as per Alibaba’s earnings report grew by 14% year on year in the quarter ended June 30. That’s the biggest annual increase in sales since the September 2021 quarter, as per Refinitiv data.
Alibaba revenue growth
Alibaba quarterly revenue in the June versus Refinitiv consensus estimates:
Revenue: 234.16 billion yuan ($32.29 billion) versus 224.92 billion yuan expected, up 14% year on year.
Net income attributable to ordinary shareholders: 34.33 billion yuan versus 28.66 billion yuan expected, up 51% year on year.
Revenue of Alibaba’s main business, Taobao and Tmall Group, saw rise of 12% year on year to 114.95 billion yuan in the June quarter. The company noted that the Taobao app for online shopping saw daily active users rise in June by 6.5% from a year ago and rose further to more than 7% in July.
Increase in revenue of Alibaba
The company’s push into overseas markets also bore results, with Alibaba’s revenue growth from international commerce retail surging by 60% year on year to 17.14 billion yuan in the June quarter.
That international demand also helped drive revenue of Alibaba’s Cainiao logistics business up by 34% to 23.16 billion yuan during the same period.
Alibaba earnings report from cloud business showed revenue growth of 4% to 25.12 billion yuan. Those results were dragged down by a drop in revenue from top customers as well as reduced need for remote work, streaming and education services in the wake of the coronavirus pandemic, the company said.
Investing in AI also helped Alibaba revenue growth
However, Alibaba said it saw “strong demand” in its cloud business for training artificial intelligence models and related services.
“We believe the growth opportunity driven by AI services have just begun. We believe the technology revolution built by AI not a short term opportunity but the beginning of a new era,” management said in a conference call with analysts Thursday.
They highlighted plans to invest further in AI development and business opportunities.
“The Taobao app has the greatest potential to become a one stop smart portal for life and consumption enabled by AI,” management said on the earnings call.
Since the craze over OpenAI’s ChatGPT in the last several months, many companies in China have rushed to announce their plans for similar products. ChatGPT isn’t officially available in China. Amid regulatory uncertainty, most similar AI products in China have focused on working with business partners rather than offering public-facing chatbots.
Alibaba new launches
In April, Alibaba launched its large language model (LLM) called Tongyi Qianwen. A LLM is an artificial intelligence model trained on huge amounts of data. It is also the basis for generative AI applications, such as ChatGPT — which generate human-like responses to user prompts.
Alibaba announced earlier this month it will be opening a version of that model to third-party developers.
Thursday’s Alibaba quarterly revenue results compare with a year-ago period when China was still struggling with the Covid-19 pandemic and a two-month lockdown was imposed in Shanghai.
The Chinese economy has been a mixed bag since the country eased its strict pandemic controls in December; investors expected a strong rebound, but domestic consumer demand has remained sluggish. This year, second-quarter GDP came in slower than analysts expected.
China is set to release retail sales and other data for July on Tuesday.
Restructuring help in raising Alibaba earnings report
Hangzhou-headquartered Alibaba has been undergoing major changes in recent months. In March, the company said it would split into six business groups, with some having the ability to raise outside funding and go public. Alibaba has already said it plans to publicly list its cloud computing division.
Current CEO and Chairman Daniel Zhang will be stepping down in September, but remain head of Alibaba’s cloud computing business, as it pushes toward a public listing. Alibaba veteran Eddie Wu will succeed him as CEO, and Joe Tsai will take over as chairman, the company said in June.
“Alibaba delivered a solid quarter as we continue to execute our Reorganization, which is beginning to unleash new energy across our businesses,” Zhang said in a release Thursday.
Alibaba Stock update
The company’s U.S traded shares rose by 4.5% in premarket trading.