3 Reasons to Buy Alibaba Stock Like There's No Tomorrow

Key Points

  • Alibaba’s stock trades 66% below its all-time high.

  • Its overseas commerce, logistics, cloud, and AI businesses are still growing.

  • It looks undervalued relative to its growth potential.

  • When you spot a great trading opportunity but don’t have the funds ready, use contra trading limits to buy stocks or ETFs immediately without upfront cash. Trade now and settle later with the Tiger Cash Boost Account. Enjoy up to 7 days interest-free with a $20K credit limit and 6 months commission-free, it's perfect for seizing short-term opportunities. Plus, sign up and deposit to receive rewards up to $1000 and enhance your investment journey! Check it out for more details.

The Chinese e-commerce and cloud leader still has room to run.

Alibaba's (BABA ) stock closed at a record high of $306.16 on Oct. 27, 2020. At the time, investors were impressed by the Chinese e-commerce and cloud leader's wide moat, rapid growth rates, and its expansion into adjacent markets.

But by Oct. 24, 2022, Alibaba's stock had dropped below its IPO price of $68 and closed at its all-time low of $60.99. Its stock crashed as China's antitrust regulators cracked down on its e-commerce business, formidable competitors like PDD Holdings gained ground, and the broader economy cooled off.

However, Alibaba's stock now trades at about $103. It bounced back as its growth stabilized, it streamlined its sprawling business, and it found fresh ways to expand its higher-growth overseas e-commerce and logistics businesses. Let's take a look at the three top reasons Alibaba's stock is still worth accumulating after that impressive recovery.

1. Alibaba's business is gradually stabilizing

Alibaba's revenue growth decelerated significantly from fiscal 2021 to fiscal 2023 (which ended in March 2023). That slowdown was caused by the tighter antitrust restrictions for its e-commerce business, which forced it to end its exclusive deals with merchants and limit its promotional strategies; tougher competition, and the macroeconomic headwinds in China.

But over the past two and a half years, Alibaba's growth rates stabilized as it expanded its overseas and cross-border marketplaces (Lazada in Southeast Asia, Trendyol in Turkey, and AliExpress for its overseas markets) to reduce its dependence on its maturing Taobao and Tmall marketplaces in China. It also expanded its higher-growth Cainiao logistics business as its cloud infrastructure business recovered.

Alibaba's investments in its higher-growth businesses are compressing its near-term margins, but they'll likely pay off in the future. For fiscal 2025, analysts expect its revenue and adjusted earnings to grow 6% and 1%, respectively, as the Chinese New Year gives its e-commerce business a slight boost through the end of fiscal 2025. For fiscal 2026, they expect its revenue and adjusted earnings to rise 8% and 13%, respectively, as that recovery continues.

2. Alibaba's artificial intelligence (AI) investments are paying off

In 2023, Alibaba launched Qwen, a new family of large language models (LLMs) running on its cloud infrastructure platform. In Jan. 2025, it launched the most powerful version, Qwen 2.5-Max, which it claims can outperform other LLM foundation models like OpenAI's GPT-4o, Meta Platforms' Llama-3.1-405B, and DeepSeek's V3.

Alibaba's rivals will inevitably dispute and challenge those claims, but they indicate the company can continue to expand its AI business even as the U.S. tightens its export curbs on AI chips. Alibaba has been cagey regarding the exact details of Qwen's development, but it's likely powered by a mix of existing Nvidia GPUs, its own first-party AI accelerators, and open-source software running on its own cloud platform.

Qwen's AI expansion could drive more AI-oriented developers and companies to sign up for Alibaba's cloud infrastructure services. The cloud intelligence group's revenue already rose 7% year over year in the first half of fiscal 2025, but it only accounted for 11% of its top line. These fresh AI tailwinds could turn it into a major growth engine again.

3. Alibaba stock looks dirt cheap relative to its growth potential

Alibaba's stock bounced back, but it still looks historically cheap at 11 times forward earnings. By comparison, Alphabet and Amazon trade at 21 and 37 times forward earnings, respectively.

Alibaba trades at such a discount to its U.S. counterparts because the threats of higher tariffs and escalating trade tensions between the U.S. and China are still driving many investors away from Chinese stocks. But if the two sides hold more talks and dial down the pressure, we could see value-seeking investors pivot back toward leading Chinese stocks like Alibaba.

Investors should keep their eye on its long-term growth potential

Alibaba faces a lot of formidable challenges, but it will likely remain China's top e-commerce and cloud company for the foreseeable future. If you expect it to weather the near-term headwinds as it expands its higher-growth overseas commerce, logistics, cloud, and AI businesses, then it could be the perfect time to buy its undervalued stock.

# AI + Policy Stimulus: Will Alibaba Head For $170?

Disclaimer: Investing carries risk. This is not financial advice. The above content should not be regarded as an offer, recommendation, or solicitation on acquiring or disposing of any financial products, any associated discussions, comments, or posts by author or other users should not be considered as such either. It is solely for general information purpose only, which does not consider your own investment objectives, financial situations or needs. TTM assumes no responsibility or warranty for the accuracy and completeness of the information, investors should do their own research and may seek professional advice before investing.

Report

Comment

  • Top
  • Latest
empty
No comments yet