U.S. short-sellers have pushed bets against Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. to the highest in more than 14 months on concern that China’s deepest economic slowdown since 1990 will only get worse.
Short interest in China’s biggest online retailer surged to 7.5 percent of shares outstanding Friday, the highest since November 2014. That is more than double from a Dec. 1 low. Bearish bets on rival JD.com Inc. have hovered around 2 percent since last month.
Pessimists are once again taking aim at Alibaba, a bellwether for U.S. investor sentiment on China, as Chinese mainland stocks entered a bear market last week. Those wagers are already starting to pay off as a selloff since the start of the year sent the American depositary receipts of Alibaba down more than 13 percent.
Investors see Alibaba as a stock that reflects the state of the Chinese economy, said Henry Guo, a San Francisco-based analyst at Summit Research Partners LLC., who has a “buy” rating on the stock. “With China’s economic outlook worsening, that’s just an easy way for people to have short China exposure.”
China’s top leadership has signaled it may accommodate more economic slackness as officials tackle delicate tasks such as reducing excess capacity. The world’s second-largest economy will slow to 6.5 percent this year and 6.3 percent next year, according to the median of economist estimates.
At a corporate level, counterfeit products and accounting frauds of Alibaba are also on the mind of investors since the company’s record 2014 debut on the New York Stock Exchange. Kynikos Associates LP founder Jim Chanos warned against the stock in November, according to a CNBC report. In December, Russian billionaire Alisher Usmanov said he has started to sell his stake in the e-commerce giant.
The firm is scheduled to report third-quarter earnings Thursday. Revenue is expected to hit 33 billion yuan (US$5 billion), according to the average estimates of 26 analysts. That compares with 26.2 billion yuan in the same period a year ago. (SD-Agencies)
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