China's Alibaba sees revenue surge on back of artificial intelligence,
e-commerce
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[February 21, 2025] By
ZEN SOO
HONG KONG (AP) — Chinese e-commerce firm Alibaba Group Holding posted
its fastest revenue growth in more than a year, beating analyst
expectations as it capitalizes on the artificial intelligence boom in
China.
Alibaba said Thursday that its revenue for the quarter ended December
grew 8% to 280.2 billion yuan ($38.38 billion) compared to the same
period last year.
Net income surged to 48.9 billion yuan ($6.71 billion). Alibaba’s New
York-traded stock was up over 12% following the earnings results.
In an earnings call, Alibaba CEO Eddie Wu said that Alibaba plans to
“aggressively invest” in artificial intelligence and cloud computing
infrastructure in the coming three years, with upcoming spending
expected to exceed what the firm has already invested over the past
decade.
“This quarter’s results demonstrated substantial progress in our ‘user
first, AI-driven’ strategies and the re-accelerated growth of our core
businesses,” Wu said.
He said that Alibaba’s artificial intelligence strategy was to pursue
artificial general intelligence (AGI), which is artificial intelligence
that can match or surpass human intelligence and can self-teach.
He added that such an opportunity for industry transformation is
something that comes along “once every several decades” and said that
AGI was Alibaba’s primary goal.
Alibaba’s plan to go big on artificial intelligence comes as rivalry in
the AI space heats up between U.S. and China. Chinese AI firm DeepSeek
recently rattled the U.S. AI industry after its AI model appeared to
rival those of leading U.S. companies while being trained on cheaper
hardware.
The Hangzhou-headquartered firm is one of many technology firms in China
who are racing to get ahead in the AI space. In January, it unveiled its
latest Qwen AI models that have performed well in benchmark tests,
placing Alibaba among the leading companies in China’s AI industry.
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 Alibaba is working with Apple to
incorporate its AI technology into Chinese iPhones, the firm said
earlier this month.
Alibaba has already implemented AI technology into its cloud
products, with its cloud business unit generating 13% revenue growth
compared to the same time last year – the fastest pace in about two
years.
Its international commerce unit, which includes
platforms such as AliExpress and Lazada, saw revenue growth of 32%
driven by “strong performance of cross-border businesses.”
Alibaba was one of several prominent Chinese technology companies
which suffered the brunt of a regulatory crackdown on the technology
industry in 2020, when authorities scuppered the initial public
offering of its financial affiliate Ant Group.
The company was later fined a record $2.8 billion for violating
anti-monopoly laws. Jack Ma, one of Alibaba’s cofounders,
disappeared from public view and the company’s stock price slumped
for several years.
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But Beijing appears to have shifted gears towards the technology
industry as it pursues technology supremacy and self-sufficiency
amid deteriorating U.S.-China relations.
Chinese President Xi Jinping recently held a private symposium,
meeting with prominent entrepreneurs including Ma.
The meeting, coupled with DeepSeek’s AI advancements, were among the
factors that sparked renewed interest in the Chinese technology
industry, sending technology stocks soaring in recent weeks.
Alibaba’s stock price is up more than 60% this year. Its U.S.-listed
shares rose 8.5% in morning trading, to $136.58.
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