Jefferies trimmed its price target on Alibaba to $225 from $231 while keeping a Buy rating on the shares. The firm still sees 53% upside from the current price of $146.75.
Alibaba Group Holding Limited, BABA
Despite the cut, Jefferies named Alibaba its top pick for 2026. The firm pointed to opportunities in AI and cloud computing, along with Alibaba’s one-stop shopping platform.
Morgan Stanley took a more cautious stance. The bank dropped its target to $180 from $200, though it maintained a Buy rating.
The difference comes down to e-commerce. Morgan Stanley warned that Alibaba’s core online shopping business has started to decline.
Weak consumer spending in China is hurting the segment. Analysts said the pressure could last through the first half of fiscal 2027 due to tough year-over-year comparisons.
The bank expects Alibaba’s overall profitability to weaken in the near to medium term. This stands in contrast to the strength coming from other parts of the business.
Alibaba’s cloud division posted 34% growth year-over-year in the latest quarter. Jefferies said the acceleration continues, powered by strong demand for AI services.
The firm expects Alibaba made solid progress in Quick Commerce across different metrics during the December quarter. Revenue growth hit 5.21% for the period.
Alibaba reported quarterly results that beat expectations last quarter. The cloud segment drove much of the outperformance.
The company’s core China e-commerce business did exceed revenue forecasts for the fiscal second quarter. But Morgan Stanley sees deterioration setting in now.
Jefferies anticipates continued spending in Alibaba’s “All Others” segment. This includes various artificial intelligence initiatives the company is pursuing.
The firm acknowledged a base effect from last year. It also noted recent industry trends affecting expectations for Customer Management Revenue.
Benchmark maintained a Buy rating on the stock. The firm emphasized strong performance in the cloud segment and Customer Management Revenue, which grew 10% year-over-year.
Bernstein cut its price target to $190 from $200 but kept an Outperform rating. The firm acknowledged Alibaba’s focus on AI initiatives.
The stock fell 2.5% in premarket trading Friday after gaining 5.3% Thursday. Shares rallied 78% over the past year as Chinese tech stocks gained momentum.
China is reportedly preparing to allow sales of Nvidia’s H200 processor in the country. Alibaba, a top cloud computing provider, is a major buyer of Nvidia equipment.
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