Alibaba names new CEO as it reports Strong Fourth Quarter

Alibaba Group Holding Ltd (BABA.N) named a new chief executive Thursday, as the Chinese ecommerce group’s blistering growth faces headwinds and less-lucrative mobile transactions surpassed those from personal computers for the first time.

Alibaba said Chief Operating Officer Daniel Zhang would on May 10 replace Jonathan Lu, who as the firm’s low-key chief executive of two years was frequently eclipsed by outspoken founder and Executive Chairman Jack Ma. Lu will remain on the board as vice chairman.

Alibaba’s quarterly revenue jumped 45 percent to $2.81 billion, beating the average analyst estimate of $2.77 billion according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S and sending shares up 9.8 percent to $88 at the market open, their highest level in more than two months.

“It was a very good quarter which is especially important considering there were a lot of expectations that the results would not come in strong,” said Gil Luria of Wedbush Securities. “Sentiment is going to swing back to the favorable side.”

Zhang takes the helm as the sprawling e-commerce company puts greater emphasis on reaching customers via mobile devices in China, the world’s biggest smartphone market.

The company did not explain the reason for the change but Executive Charman Jack Ma said in a letter to staff he was pleased to see the reins going to a leader born in the 1970s. Zhang was born in 1972 while his predecessor was born in 1969, according to Chinese media.

Despite the strong fourth quarter, the incoming CEO could face slowing growth as saturation among online shoppers threatens to hobble expansion, along with stiff competition from domestic rivals Tencent Holding Ltd (0700.HK), Baidu Inc (BIDU.O) and JD.com Inc (JD.O) on mobile.

The total value of transactions made on Alibaba’s platforms, known as gross merchandise volume (GMV), grew 40 percent to $97 billion in the quarter ended March 31. This was the lowest rate of growth in at least 11 quarters, despite sales on mobile devices growing 257 percent year-on-year to account for 51 percent of overall GMV.

Alibaba may also be facing e-commerce user saturation. The increase of annual active buyers, or customers who buy at least one product a year via Alibaba, was the slowest in 3-1/2 years, up 5 percent from the previous quarter to 350 million.

The group will continue investing in areas such as digital entertainment, cloud computing and mobile Internet, Chief Financial Officer Maggie Wu told a conference call.

Zhang will also take on decelerating profit growth.

Alibaba’s net income excluding extraordinary and one-off items grew 16 percent year-on-year, a far cry from 48 percent growth the previous year and triple-digit gains in the 12 months before that.

Source: Reuters

Leave a comment