Will Alibaba’s share price suffer from the standoff with China’s government?
Alibaba’s [BABA] share price has had a turbulent 12 months. After suffering initially during the onset of the coronavirus pandemic, the stock grew rapidly as the tech and e-commerce giant’s business gained traction under lockdown conditions. Subsequently, Alibaba’s share price reached an all-time intraday high of $319.32 on 27 October 2020.
However, the company then began to struggle. Alibaba’s share
price fell 30.5% over the next two months to close at $222.00 on 24 December.
This period saw daily tumbles of 8.3% on 10 November and 13.3% on 24 December.
Alibaba’s share price is down 3.2% for the year to 6 April’s
close, with strong rises in late January and early February cancelled out
during the early weeks of March. Despite its struggles, Alibaba’s share price
closed 6 April 157.33% up on its year-ago level.
Technological warfare
Jack Ma, co-founder and former executive chairman of Alibaba
(pictured), is on the front line of a confrontation between China’s government
and technology industry, which appears set to escalate from skirmishes into an
all-out war.
After blocking the $37bn IPO of Ant Group in November, the
Communist party leadership held a meeting in March. The minutes denounced the
“inappropriate manner” in which some of the country’s tech platforms were
growing and called the lack of regulatory control over this growth “a
considerable problem”.
The day after the meeting, Alibaba’s popular UC Browser was
removed from several app stores, including those of Huawei [002502.SZ] and Xiaomi
[1810.HK], reported CNBC.
However, UC Browser was still available through Samsung’s
[005930.KS] and Apple’s [AAPL] app stores. The move against UC Browser followed
criticisms on state-owned broadcaster China Central Television (CCTV) that UC
Browser allowed private hospitals to buy keyword search results for the names
of some of China’s best-known hospitals, potentially endangering patients by
directing them away from their most suitable public hospitals. An Alibaba
spokesperson indicated that the company had responded vigorously to the
allegations, with the ad contents referred to in the CCTV show immediately
removed.
According to CNBC, Xi Jinping, president of China, fired
warning shots at the country’s “platform companies” — a term referring to
technology companies in businesses ranging from social media to e-commerce —
calling for greater oversight, the prevention of monopolies, fair competition
and curbs on the “disorderly expansion of capital”. Xi also called for
regulators to create a “data property rights system”.
De-platforming is a common punishment in China for companies
that are deemed to have broken the rules. UC Browser’s removal from app stores
follows on the back of an antitrust investigation into Alibaba as well as the
Ant Group IPO postponement, reported the Financial Times.
Speculation is rife that fintech giant Tencent [0700.HK]
could be next in the government’s crosshairs, with Bloomberg reporting on 12
March that the company could be required to fold its digital payments and
online consumer lending operations into a holding company, stifling its pace of
expansion.
Benchmark performance
Of the three ETFs within the China tech theme on Opto’s
Theme Performance Screener, only the KraneShares CSI China Internet ETF [KWEB]
carries Alibaba. It is the fund’s second-largest holding, comprising 9.92% of
the fund’s value (as of 6 April), with Tencent [TCEHY] taking top spot at
10.65% of assets. The fund has gained 4.1% in the year-to-date to 6 April, with
a similar February rise and March slump to that seen by Alibaba’s own stock.
The ETF closed 6 April 71.51% up over the trailing 12 months.
Tencent is also the largest holding of the Invesco China
Technology ETF [CQQQ] at 10.48% of the fund’s value (as of 6 April). Compared
to the KraneShares CSI China Internet ETF, it has performed marginally less
strongly over the past 12 months and the year-to-date, with gains of 69.86% and
2.67% respectively.
The Global X MSCI China Information Technology ETF [CHIK]
carries neither Alibaba nor Tencent, with Xiaomi topping its holdings list at
9.81% of net assets (as of 6 April.) The fund has recorded a 9.10% year-to-date
decrease, although it’s up 65.92% over the past 12 months.
The relative underperformance of ETFs omitting either one of
or both Alibaba and Tencent, despite the regulatory battles both companies are
fighting, indicates their continuing prominent position in China’s tech
landscape. Jackson Wong, director of asset management at Amber Hill Capital,
told CNBC: “At this point, I can’t see any other stocks that can challenge
their positions in China… [they] are still the benchmark.”
Disclaimer Past performance is not a reliable indicator of
future results.
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