Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba said Thursday that first quarter revenue beat analyst estimates, defying a slowing economy and a trade war with the United States.
Revenue for the April-June period rose 42 per cent year-on-year to 114.9 billion yuan (USD 16.7 billion), a company statement said, outpacing an average analyst estimate of 111.6 billion yuan compiled by Bloomberg News.
Joe Tsai, Alibaba's Executive Vice-Chairman, attributed the results to China's demographic trends and continued urbanisation, pointing to the growing urban middle class willing to shell out for brands on Alibaba's e-commerce platforms.
Net profit for the quarter was 21.2 billion (USD 3.1 billion), more than double from the same period a year earlier.
Revenue in the Hangzhou-based company's core e-commerce segment, which accounts for the vast majority of its business, jumped 44 per cent, while the smaller but fast-growing cloud computing unit surged 66 per cent.
"Alibaba had a great quarter, expanding our user base to 674 million annual active consumers, demonstrating our superior user experience," said Daniel Zhang, Chief Executive Officer of Alibaba.
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"We will continue to invest in technology and bring digital transformation to millions of businesses globally."
Alibaba has been pouring money into what it calls "new retail", which optimises in-store sales and service using data culled online.
It has also been fighting to grow its business abroad, primarly in Southeast Asia where it runs the Lazada e-commerce platform.
Orders on Lazada grew over 100 per cent on-year for the third consecutive quarter, the company said.
Alibaba's large entertainment division including the Netflix-like Youku grew 6 per cent, as China's movie industry faces a tough regulatory environment with authorities cancelling films they deem unpatriotic and continually changing censorship guidelines.
Zhang told investors the movie streaming platform is investing in original content with average daily subscribers up 40 per cent year-on-year.
Alibaba dominates China's rapidly expanding consumer culture and its corporate results are typically closely watched for any signs that a Chinese economic deceleration and the US-China trade tensions were turning off shoppers.
Companies such as Alibaba are at the nexus of a national economic strategy to encourage more domestic consumer spending and thereby lessen the reliance on fickle foreign demand for Chinese exports.
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