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Alibaba Group Holding ups buybacks to $25 billion; crackdown to ease

Alibaba Group Holding soared 11 per cent after ramping up its share buyback program to $25 billion, fueling hopes that Beijing is easing off an internet crackdown that wiped out $470 billion of the e-commerce giant’s value.

The board approved the program, which will run for two years through to March 2024, the company said. It also appointed a new independent director in Shan Weijian, chairman of alternative asset management house PAG. Shan, a longtime investor in Chinese companies, will replace Ericsson Chief Executive Officer Börje Ekholm from March 31.

Alibaba’s up-sized buyback represents one of the largest shareholder-reward programs in China’s giant internet industry, and coincides with a re-calibration of sentiment after Xi Jinping and his deputy Liu He pledged to support the economy and markets and finish the clampdown on the tech sector “as soon as possible” — triggering a historic rally in Chinese stocks.

China’s largest companies are only just starting to emerge from a year of unparalleled regulatory scrutiny into sectors from online commerce to social media. Alibaba’s shares closed at their highest in almost a month in Hong Kong on Tuesday, and were up in pre-market trading in New York.

The buyback “signals where company management sees value, and it may also be a bellwether for where they see regulatory action – perhaps we are coming closer to the end of it,” said Justin Tang, head of Asian Research at United First Partners in Singapore.

Chinese tech corporations have until recently rarely resorted to big shareholder-return programs like dividends or stock repurchases. But the country’s largest corporations have resigned themselves to a new era of cautious expansion, nearly two years into a bruising internet crackdown that quickly engulfed everything from e-commerce to ride-hailing and online education.

Alibaba grew its buyback arsenal for the third time since Beijing’s tech crackdown started in late 2020 — twice in under a year. It acquired 56.2 million American depositary shares under its previously announced share buyback program for about $9.2 billion. That means it’s spent more on repurchases than any other tech firm since the sector’s downturn began.

But that’s done little to boost the stock’s fortunes.

Alibaba reported its slowest growth on record during the December quarter, and Tencent Holdings is expected to do the same on Wednesday. E-commerce rival Pinduoduo Inc. reported revenue that missed estimates for the third straight quarter.

Alibaba Chief Executive Officer Daniel Zhang has sketched out how China’s e-commerce leader will now prioritize user retention over acquisition. Bloomberg

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