Could Alibaba and Chinese Tech stocks be staging a legit rebound as they may have bottomed in March 2022? Add me on Instagram: michellemarki
Alibaba is still delivering double digit revenue growth in spite of facing slowing consumer demand, the country’s real estate problems, and increased competition.
Chinese stocks cratered as some Chinese cities like Shanghai entered into a lockdown in March through May 2022. Shanghai has a population that's Texas-sized with 28.5 million, so the city’s lockdown did definite economic damage to many Chinese businesses.
After having reached a 52 week low of $73 per share in mid March 2022, BABA hasn’t re-tested these lows as it was trading in the $80-100 range throughout the spring.
Goldman Sachs and other investment banks may be signaling that the “worst is over” for Chinese Internet stocks if we look at Kraneshares China Internet ETF (KWEB) as a proxy in maybe having bottomed in March.
Wall Street firms such as JPMorgan, Citigroup, Fidelity, Amundi, and BlackRock have all been buying into BABA throughout the March declines and since then.
In mid June 2022, BABA jumped from positive news that Ant Group’s application to form a financial holding company was accepted by the People’s Bank of China. Throughout June it had been pumped up from rumors that Ant would be able to IPO, but that’s not yet on the table after being canceled in November 2020.
About 53% of Chinese consumers use Ant’s Alipay, a popular mobile payment app, which is incredible if that’s about 700 million Chinese. The US is behind in using mobile payments compared to Chinese consumers’ use of Alipay and WeChat.
As Wall Street was gaining in bullish sentiment on BABA, superinvestors were turning more bearish in Q1 2022. There were only 5 buys, 8 sells, and 3 holds on BABA as of 13F filings from Q1 2022 among superinvestors I track.
Some of what stood out to me was that BABA bulls Bill Miller and Ray Dalio kept buying, while previously some of the biggest Alibaba cheerleading owners Charlie Munger representing DJCO and Greg Alexander of Sequoia / Conifer Management appeared to become more bearish. DJCO sold 50% of its BABA stake, perhaps for tax loss harvesting reasons (though how would it work if the purchase was done in the prior year and DJCO sold this year?).
It surprised me that both Greg Alexander and Phil Town turned so bearish that they sold entirely out of BABA.
What is noteworthy is how Ray Dalio of Bridgewater Associates is putting his money where his mouth is. Dalio and Bridgewater gained even more confidence in BABA, making it into their 6th biggest position in Q1 up from their 8th biggest position in Q4 2021. The amount Bridgewater has invested in BABA went from $507 million in Q4 2021 to $814 million in Q1 2022, an increase of $307 million!
Looking at Alibaba’s financial performance, the results have been pleasantly surprising as they delivered 18% YOY revenue growth in China eCommerce and 23% YOY revenue growth in their cloud business.
Cloud revenues for Q1 2022 were $11.76B vs Q1 2021 $9.26B, and their income loss was less than half of last year’s at $815M vs 2021’s loss of $1.9B. I thought they would’ve started breaking even by now but I guess not yet. Maybe within the coming year they’ll not only break even but start generating positive cash flows from the cloud.
One portfolio manager named Sid Choraria estimates that Alibaba’s cloud revenues will more than double to $25B within 3 years, which would be fantastic.
Moreover, in late March 2022, Alibaba’s management increased their share repurchase program amount to $25B, up from a previous program amount of $15B. This increased stock buyback commitment may have helped to put in a floor in Alibaba’s stock price.
Within this current buyback program, they have repurchased $9.6B worth of BABA ADRs.
Even though it appears as though superinvestors have turned bearish on BABA as Wall Street is willing to dip a little into Chinese stocks, maybe they will gradually become bullish again in Q2.
Do your own intrinsic value calculation to decide if this is a value trap stock or not. :)
If you're interested in learning how to take control of your finances and start becoming an investor like Warren Buffett, check out my free PDF guide: https://michellemarki.com/resources/
I look forward to making more investor friends! Please like and subscribe if you learned something or enjoyed my video. Thank you! :)
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Add me: https://instagram.com/michellemarki
Check out my Blog: https://michellemarki.com
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Disclaimers: This content is for entertainment, information, education purposes only. Michelle is not a financial advisor and is not providing financial, investment, trading, tax advice, or recommendations. Please consult with a professional financial advisor with a fiduciary duty and responsibility if you need help in your situation. All trademarks, logos, and brand names belong to their respective owners.
Alibaba is still delivering double digit revenue growth in spite of facing slowing consumer demand, the country’s real estate problems, and increased competition.
Chinese stocks cratered as some Chinese cities like Shanghai entered into a lockdown in March through May 2022. Shanghai has a population that's Texas-sized with 28.5 million, so the city’s lockdown did definite economic damage to many Chinese businesses.
After having reached a 52 week low of $73 per share in mid March 2022, BABA hasn’t re-tested these lows as it was trading in the $80-100 range throughout the spring.
Goldman Sachs and other investment banks may be signaling that the “worst is over” for Chinese Internet stocks if we look at Kraneshares China Internet ETF (KWEB) as a proxy in maybe having bottomed in March.
Wall Street firms such as JPMorgan, Citigroup, Fidelity, Amundi, and BlackRock have all been buying into BABA throughout the March declines and since then.
In mid June 2022, BABA jumped from positive news that Ant Group’s application to form a financial holding company was accepted by the People’s Bank of China. Throughout June it had been pumped up from rumors that Ant would be able to IPO, but that’s not yet on the table after being canceled in November 2020.
About 53% of Chinese consumers use Ant’s Alipay, a popular mobile payment app, which is incredible if that’s about 700 million Chinese. The US is behind in using mobile payments compared to Chinese consumers’ use of Alipay and WeChat.
As Wall Street was gaining in bullish sentiment on BABA, superinvestors were turning more bearish in Q1 2022. There were only 5 buys, 8 sells, and 3 holds on BABA as of 13F filings from Q1 2022 among superinvestors I track.
Some of what stood out to me was that BABA bulls Bill Miller and Ray Dalio kept buying, while previously some of the biggest Alibaba cheerleading owners Charlie Munger representing DJCO and Greg Alexander of Sequoia / Conifer Management appeared to become more bearish. DJCO sold 50% of its BABA stake, perhaps for tax loss harvesting reasons (though how would it work if the purchase was done in the prior year and DJCO sold this year?).
It surprised me that both Greg Alexander and Phil Town turned so bearish that they sold entirely out of BABA.
What is noteworthy is how Ray Dalio of Bridgewater Associates is putting his money where his mouth is. Dalio and Bridgewater gained even more confidence in BABA, making it into their 6th biggest position in Q1 up from their 8th biggest position in Q4 2021. The amount Bridgewater has invested in BABA went from $507 million in Q4 2021 to $814 million in Q1 2022, an increase of $307 million!
Looking at Alibaba’s financial performance, the results have been pleasantly surprising as they delivered 18% YOY revenue growth in China eCommerce and 23% YOY revenue growth in their cloud business.
Cloud revenues for Q1 2022 were $11.76B vs Q1 2021 $9.26B, and their income loss was less than half of last year’s at $815M vs 2021’s loss of $1.9B. I thought they would’ve started breaking even by now but I guess not yet. Maybe within the coming year they’ll not only break even but start generating positive cash flows from the cloud.
One portfolio manager named Sid Choraria estimates that Alibaba’s cloud revenues will more than double to $25B within 3 years, which would be fantastic.
Moreover, in late March 2022, Alibaba’s management increased their share repurchase program amount to $25B, up from a previous program amount of $15B. This increased stock buyback commitment may have helped to put in a floor in Alibaba’s stock price.
Within this current buyback program, they have repurchased $9.6B worth of BABA ADRs.
Even though it appears as though superinvestors have turned bearish on BABA as Wall Street is willing to dip a little into Chinese stocks, maybe they will gradually become bullish again in Q2.
Do your own intrinsic value calculation to decide if this is a value trap stock or not. :)
If you're interested in learning how to take control of your finances and start becoming an investor like Warren Buffett, check out my free PDF guide: https://michellemarki.com/resources/
I look forward to making more investor friends! Please like and subscribe if you learned something or enjoyed my video. Thank you! :)
---
Add me: https://instagram.com/michellemarki
Check out my Blog: https://michellemarki.com
---
Disclaimers: This content is for entertainment, information, education purposes only. Michelle is not a financial advisor and is not providing financial, investment, trading, tax advice, or recommendations. Please consult with a professional financial advisor with a fiduciary duty and responsibility if you need help in your situation. All trademarks, logos, and brand names belong to their respective owners.
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