Despite Weak Outlook, the Dip in Alibaba Stock Will Come to An End

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Value investors who bought Alibaba Group (NYSE:BABA) on relatively favorable valuations and news of Charlie Munger doubling down lost plenty of money.

Alibaba (BABA) logo on the side of a glass-walled building.
Alibaba (BABA) logo on the side of a glass-walled building.

Source: testing / Shutterstock.com

Again.

BABA stock broke down below the $160 20-day and 50-day moving averages last week after posting quarterly results. The company forecast revenue will grow at rates not seen since it debuted in public markets in 2014. The Chinese Communist Party (CCP) engineered a slowdown through an onslaught of regulatory reforms, including its “Common Prosperity” program.

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Why should recent buyers expect the dip to end? More importantly, when will the stock stop falling?

Q2 Earnings Erosion Hurt BABA Stock

In the second quarter, Alibaba posted revenue growing by 29% to RMB 200.69 billion ($31.15 billion). Non-GAAP earnings per share of RMB 11.20 ($1.75) was on $2.329 billion in income from operations. This values BABA shares at a price-to-earnings ratio in the teens.

Before the regulatory crackdown and endless penalties, investors could call Alibaba a cheap alternative to Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN). That comparison is no longer valid. Amazon is free to invest its enormous cash flow back into the business. AMZN shareholders do not have any penalties to consider.

On the conference call, CEO Daniel Zhang did not mention Common Prosperity costs in the years ahead. Instead, he said that Alibaba will prioritize offering Taobao Deals to customers. The company first announced this bargain marketplace in March 2021, running as a mini-program on Tencent’s (OTCMKTS:TCEHY) WeChat. Looking ahead, it will invest in the infrastructure. It will build the manufacturing to support the consumer model, which will lead to sales growth from Taobao Deal.

The non-GAAP reconciliation reveals that Alibaba excluded material costs. For example, it incurred RMB 11.88 billion ($1.7 billion) for the purchase of property and equipment. The report excludes its pledge for $15.5 billion for China President Xi Jinping’s Common Prosperity drive.

Opportunity in High National GMV

Alibaba must avoid further restrictions from the CCP. It is embracing connectivity and openness for its consumer sides, including Taobao. Customers benefit from a positive experience that also gives competitors a fair chance. This non-monopolistic behavior might satisfy the Chinese government.

Alibaba’s revenue growth forecast of between 11% to the mid-teens in the second half of 2022 is a sharp decline from growth in the first half. CFO Maggie Wu said it expects a significant drop in China’s GDP and consumption. Alibaba has a high gross merchandise volume of 44% of national totals. After the contraction ends, Alibaba’s high national gross merchandise value (GMV) will lift revenue growth rates.