Alibaba just posted its earnings and let’s be honest, it wasn’t the flex investors were hoping for.
Despite pulling in 236.45 billion yuan ($32.8 billion) in revenue last quarter, the company missed Wall Street’s target by a hair. Analysts expected 237.24 billion yuan, and that narrow miss was enough to send Alibaba’s U.S. shares down over 5% in pre-market trading.
But that tiny shortfall tells a much bigger story: China’s e-commerce battleground is fiercer than ever.
Competition Is Heating Up
While Alibaba’s core platforms, Taobao and Tmall, did grow 9% year-over-year (thanks to more customers and bigger baskets), that wasn’t enough to outshine rivals.
JD.com, for example, crushed expectations with 15.8% revenue growth, pulling in 301.1 billion yuan ($41.8 billion). Then there’s Pinduoduo, which has been clawing away at market share with aggressive pricing and viral social shopping strategies.
The message? Alibaba’s not bleeding, but it’s no longer untouchable.

Cloud Business Is the Bright Spot
On the upside, Alibaba’s Cloud Intelligence Unit continues to rise. Revenue jumped 18%, hitting 30.1 billion yuan, as demand for AI and digital infrastructure surges in China and abroad.
They also unveiled Qwen 3, their newest AI model built for more complex reasoning and faster processing. In other words: they’re not just selling stuff — they’re investing in the future of smart tech.
International Push Has Room to Grow
Globally, Alibaba’s overseas segment (AliExpress, Lazada, etc.) grew 22%, but even that fell short of forecasts (expected: 26.4%). Blame it on cautious consumers and murky trade environments.
What to Watch
All eyes are now on China’s “618” shopping festival next month — a mid-year sales event that often sets the tone for the second half of the year. If Alibaba can deliver a strong performance there, it might ease investor nerves and reassert its dominance.
Bottom Line
Alibaba didn’t tank but it didn’t win either. In a world where JD.com is accelerating, Pinduoduo is innovating, and consumers are getting pickier, staying on top will take more than just name recognition.
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