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Alibaba is Back But This is Still The Beginning

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Alibaba Group Holding Limited (NYSE:BABA) found itself on the wrong side of government scrutiny in late 2020, which forced the company to delay the public listing of its financial services business, Ant Group. From a high of over $310 in October 2020, Alibaba stock declined to less than $64 in October 2022, wiping billions of investor money in the process. After making lackluster progress toward a meaningful recovery in both 2023 and 2024, Alibaba stock has gained more than 50% so far this year on the back of its co-founder Jack Ma's meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping last month, suggesting the political turmoil facing the tech giant is finally coming to an end. According to Bloomberg, during this meeting, President Xi pledged to support the private tech sector in the country by avoiding excessive fines on tech giants.

After staying behind the scenes in the last few years, Jack Ma has once again resurfaced publicly, this time with a clear focus on revitalizing Alibaba's growth through strategic AI investments. Even on the back of recent gains, Alibaba is still reasonably valued at a forward P/E ratio of around 14, which leaves ample room for a multiple expansion in the long run when AI investments start yielding desired returns.

Investors, however, will have to keep a close eye on how Alibaba navigates the trade war between the U.S. and its trading partners. In addition to the 10% tariff on all Chinese imports implemented as part of Executive Order 14195 on Feb. 1 which was later increased to 20% - President Trump announced a new 34% tariff on Chinese imports on April 2, resulting in an effective tariff rate of 54%.

Alibaba's AI strategy will boost revenue growth

Alibaba has introduced a multifaceted AI strategy focusing on all of its key businesses. Some of the key AI focus areas are listed below.

1. Cloud AI upgrades to better position itself to compete with Baidu and Tencent.

2. AI in e-commerce personalized recommendations, customer service, and smarter logistics.

3. Generative AI launching an advanced Qwen model.

Last February, Alibaba announced a $53 billion investment in AI and cloud computing infrastructure over the next three years which is more than what the company has spent on AI in total in the past decade. These aggressive AI investments aim to improve the computing power of Alibaba Cloud to support advanced AI applications. As part of these investments, the company will also focus on upgrading its generative AI model, Qwen.

The introduction of the Qwen 2.5 series in late January has already tilted the odds in favor of Alibaba in China's generative AI landscape due to the superior performance of this model. As illustrated below, Qwen 2.5 Max, the most advanced model, achieved better performance metrics than groundbreaking DeepSeek across several benchmark studies. Interestingly, Qwen 2.5 surpassed GPT-4o in certain studies as well, which suggests Alibaba is on track to becoming a global generative AI powerhouse.