Alibaba Group sign is seen at the World Artificial Intelligence Conference (WAIC) in Shanghai, China July 6, 2023.
Aly Song | Reuters
Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba on Thursday said revenue grew by 14% year on year in the quarter ended June 30. That’s the biggest annual increase in sales since the September 2021 quarter, according to Refinitiv data.
The company’s U.S.-traded shares rose by 4.5% in premarket trading.
Here’s how Alibaba did in the June quarter versus Refinitiv consensus estimates:
Revenue: 234.16 billion yuan ($32.29 billion) versus 224.92 billion yuan expected, up 14% year on year.
Net income attributable to ordinary shareholders: 34.33 billion yuan versus 28.66 billion yuan expected, up 51% year on year.
Alibaba’s main business, Taobao and Tmall Group, saw revenue rise 12% year on year to 114.95 billion yuan in the June quarter. The company noted that the Taobao app for online shopping saw daily active users rise in June by 6.5% from a year ago.
The company’s push into overseas markets also bore results, with revenue from international commerce retail surging by 60% year on year to 17.14 billion yuan in the June quarter.
That international demand also helped drive revenue for Alibaba’s Cainiao logistics business up by 34% to 23.16 billion yuan during the same period.
Alibaba’s cloud business reported revenue growth of 4% to 25.12 billion yuan
Thursday’s quarterly results compare with a year-ago period when China was still struggling with the Covid-19 pandemic and a two-month lockdown was imposed in Shanghai.
Current CEO and Chairman Daniel Zhang will be stepping down in September, but remain head of Alibaba’s cloud computing business, as it pushes toward a public listing. Alibaba veteran Eddie Wu will succeed him as CEO, and Joe Tsai will take over as chairman, the company said in June.
“Alibaba delivered a solid quarter as we continue to execute our Reorganization, which is beginning to unleash new energy across our businesses,” Zhang said in a release Thursday.