Alibaba and Tencent party starts to fade


Jittery manoeuvres: Alibaba’s headquarters in Beijing will come into sharp focus. Chinese technology stocks gained 20% since the end of May, but are down nearly 4% this month as nervous investors await the tech giant’s quarterly report. — Bloomberg

BEIJING: China’s largest tech companies, Alibaba Group Holding Ltd and Tencent Holdings Ltd, have gained US$66bil in market value since May’s end, propelled by expectations of a gradual return to pre-crackdown growth and a litany of official promises to unshackle the private sector. Yet some investors warn that the celebration may be premature.

For the first time since 2021, China’s technology leaders head into an earnings season with what appears to be the wind at their backs. They’re set to report their strongest growth rates in over a year.

Driven by a need to rejuvenate the world’s No. 2 economy, Xi Jinping has in recent months led Party cadres and state media in proclaiming Beijing’s support for a trillion-dollar sector wracked by two years of unpredictable diktats.

And in July, Beijing signalled it was ready to unfetter the sector when it wrapped up a probe into Jack Ma-backed Ant Group Co.

Still, investors betting on an inflection point risk getting ahead of themselves.

Chinese policymakers have stopped short of providing direct, major financial or policy support for businesses, and consumer spending remains muted thanks to a subdued outlook for wages and record-high youth unemployment.

Profit margins remain thin amid rising competition from upstarts that mostly escaped the brunt of the crackdown, such as ByteDance Ltd and PDD Holdings Inc.

While a gauge of Chinese tech stocks has gained 20% since the end of May, it’s down nearly 4% this month as nervous investors take some money off the table ahead of Alibaba’s report today.

“The bottom line is that if China’s economy is weak, it will be harder for these Internet companies to outgrow the economy now than before.

And of course, with all the new regulations and restrictions on these businesses, they are no longer free to seek growth,” said Vey-Sern Ling, a managing director at Union Bancaire Privee.

“The kind of growth that we saw in the past in China is unlikely to return,” he added.

The quarterly prints will offer the first clue as to whether the much-anticipated tech revival has truly begun. Yet even if Beijing hews to its promises, it’s going to be a long slog to even approach the pre-2021 years of deal-making, experimentation and free-form expansion.

Alibaba and Tencent, after shedding more than US$350bil of value since 2020, cut more than 20,000 jobs between them last year to survive regulatory and economic turmoil.

They face a two-pronged assault: rivals like Baidu and Meituan are vying for dominance of the Internet thanks to the emergence of generative artificial intelligence.

Baidu has so far stolen much of the limelight in the post-ChatGPT race, debuting Ernie in March before launching into several iterations.

Abroad, ByteDance and PDD’s Temu continue to make strides, building on expansions that began when Alibaba and Tencent were forced to show restraint. During the crackdown, companies including ByteDance’s TikTok, miHoYo and Temu revved up overseas forays for growth.

Despite rising geopolitical tensions, this generation of upstarts offers a template for older peers seeking to regain pre-crackdown heights.

“At this very moment, the priority and the focus are on economic growth,” Weijian Shan, executive chairman and co-founder of Hong Kong-based asset manager PAG, told Bloomberg Television last week.

“The sentiment is rather weak and the confidence remains rather subdued. It takes a couple of years of policy stability for full confidence to return.”

Alibaba and Tencent are also grappling with lingering uncertainty. Last week, investors got a brief reminder of the crackdown years when regulators, with little warning, published a set of rules limiting the amount of time minors can spend on their smartphones.

In March, Alibaba announced a breakup into six mostly independent pieces, a historic split regarded as allowing its individual businesses to pursue new initiatives while fulfilling Beijing’s goal of cutting its most powerful private enterprises down to size.

With the split, the eCommerce leader is intent on creating a family of leaders in businesses from cloud computing and logistics to international commerce that can seek funding and listing separately, appeasing shareholders hungry for value.

Overseeing the momentous transition are two of Jack Ma’s Alibaba co-founders, Eddie Wu and Joseph Tsai, who will replace eight-year veteran Daniel Zhang at the helm in September.

It’s unclear if either will chair the usual post-earnings briefing today. — Bloomberg

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