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Spread bets and CFDs are complex instruments and come with a high risk of losing money rapidly due to leverage. 69% of retail investor accounts lose money when trading spread bets and CFDs with this provider. You should consider whether you understand how spread bets and CFDs work, and whether you can afford to take the high risk of losing your money.

Alibaba shares: 3 factors to consider ahead of Q4 results

China’s faltering economy, strained Sino-American political relations, and a costly European growth strategy are all affecting the e-commerce giant.

alibaba Source: Bloomberg

Alibaba (NYSE: BABA) shares have fallen by 74% from their record $310 in mid-October 2020 to a mere $82 today.

And reporting Q4 results tomorrow, the Chinese giant’s share price could have further to fall.

Alibaba share price: 3 factors to consider

1) China’s economic woes

After years of growth, China could be in trouble. Retail sales fell by 11.1% in April compared to a year ago, industrial output was down 2.9%, and the unemployment rate in China’s 31 largest cities rose to a high of 6.7%.

Worryingly, China’s Passenger Car Association reported passenger car production fell by an incredible 41.1%, with the auto sector accounting for one-sixth of Chinese jobs and 10% of retail sales.

The National Bureau of Statistics noted the ‘increasingly grim and complex international environment and greater shock of (the) Covid-19 pandemic at home obviously exceeded expectation, new downward pressure on the economy continued to grow.’

Nomura’s Ting Lu thinks ‘the unwinding of lockdowns has been extremely slow, due partly to the caution among local government officials…local lockdowns will still severely impact the production-end of the economy in May and (we) view a quick turnaround as all but impossible’

The impact of ‘zero-covid’ lockdowns, particularly in Shanghai, has been disastrous for the economy.

china flag Source: Bloomberg

2) Sino-American political relations

The investment case for US-listed Chinese technology stocks has been complicated by Chinese anti-monopoly restrictions on so-called platform stocks, in addition to SEC demands for greater financial oversight. With political tensions rising over the Russia-Ukraine war, regulatory risks have become ever more profound.

Alibaba itself was fined $2.8 billion in an anti-monopoly probe last year, while Didi’s regulatory penalties saw its share price collapse by 90%, or $60 billion, days after its NYSE IPO.

In March, JP Morgan called Chinese big tech stocks, including Alibaba,‘uninvestable’ for the next six to 12 months, which erased $200 billion from US and Asian markets.

However, Premier Li Keqiang has now encouraged China’s big tech companies to list on ‘domestic and overseas markets in accordance with laws and regulations,’ a week after Vice Premier Liu He advocated for them to be open to ‘the outside world.’ In addition, China had already paused some big tech regulations to help with the pandemic-related slowdown.

JP Morgan has now re-upgraded these stocks, with analyst Alex Yao arguing ‘significant uncertainties facing the sector should begin to abate on the back of recent regulatory announcements.’

But the risk of Chinese government interference at short notice remains high.

In a case of mistaken identity last month, investors thought that billionaire co-founder and former CEO Jack Ma had been placed under ‘compulsory measures’ on suspicion of ‘colluding with overseas anti-China hostile forces’ to ‘incite secession’ and ‘incite subversion of state power.’

Alibaba shares plunged by nearly 10%, wiping $26 billion off its market cap, demonstrating the frayed nerves of rattled shareholders.

3) Growth strategy

Alibaba now has a price-to-earnings ratio of only 23, less than half that of Amazon. And while its larger competitor could be moving towards a consolidation stage under its new CEO, Alibaba is planning for more growth.

Negatively, Q1 revenue is expected to be $29.8 billion, a record low increase of just 6% year-over-year according to the Refinitiv average analyst forecast. And YipitData estimates that Alibaba’s flagship Tmall retail site saw sales fall 13% year-over-year in April.

But the company has increased its share buyback program by $10 billion to $25 billion. It had already bought back 56.2 million shares worth $9.2 billion, based on CFO Toby Xu’s belief that ‘Alibaba's stock price does not fairly reflect the company's value given our robust financial health and expansion plan.’

Baird analyst Colin Sebastian notes ‘this was a very deliberate sign from the company they believe their stock is inexpensive.’ However, he also thinks while ‘there is some optimism that the operating environment for Internet companies in China may be normalizing… we think management's tone could remain cautious with respect to near-term growth and margins.’

Reuters reports that Alibaba is now seeking further European growth through its Singaporean Lazada offshoot to offset ‘sluggish demand at home.’ However, it only controlled 4% of Europe’s market share in 2021 and will be competing against multiple entrenched rivals, including Amazon which controls five times as much.

It will have to invest heavily to have a hope of competing, while simultaneously dealing with weakened growth at home.

Alibaba reports Q1 results on 26 May.

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