Alibaba delivered disappointing financial results for its December quarter on Thursday, falling below revenue projections while experiencing a steep profit contraction. The announcement triggered a 4% decline in the company’s U.S.-traded shares during premarket hours.
For the quarter ending December 31, 2025, total revenue registered at 284.8 billion yuan ($41.4 billion). Market analysts had projected 290.7 billion yuan. The figure represents just a 2% sales increase — essentially stagnant growth.
Alibaba Group Holding Limited, BABA
The profit picture proved far more troubling. Net income crashed 66% compared to the prior year period, dropping to 15.6 billion yuan from 46.4 billion yuan. Management attributed the decline to a 74% plunge in operating income, fueled by substantial investments in rapid commerce infrastructure, enhanced customer experience initiatives, and technological advancement.
The quarterly performance represents Alibaba’s most significant profit deterioration since the first quarter of 2024.
Despite the overall challenges, a legitimate growth narrative exists within the financials. Alibaba’s Cloud Intelligence Group achieved 36% revenue expansion, generating 43.3 billion yuan during the three-month period. Revenue from AI-centered products maintained triple-digit growth rates for the tenth consecutive quarter.
The e-commerce giant has committed upward of $53 billion toward artificial intelligence initiatives across multiple years. While this exceeds investments by domestic Chinese competitors, it represents only a fraction of the $650 billion American cloud providers intend to deploy throughout 2026 alone.
Earlier this week, Alibaba introduced Wukong, an enterprise-oriented agentic AI platform. Simultaneously, the company increased cloud computing and storage pricing by as much as 34%, a strategic shift analysts interpret as prioritizing profitability over market share acquisition.
Morgan Stanley analyst Gary Yu characterized the introduction of Alibaba Token Hub — a newly created division consolidating nearly all AI operations under CEO Wu’s direct control — as evidence of “explosive AI demand driven by robust token consumption.”
The quarter presented numerous obstacles for the technology conglomerate.
Alibaba’s core e-commerce operations face intensifying competition from Chinese rivals. The company deployed substantial resources during China’s Lunar New Year celebration, distributing promotional incentives alongside Tencent, ByteDance, and Baidu to boost adoption of its consumer AI application. While competing platforms experienced substantial user growth, Qwen’s engagement remained elevated above pre-campaign baseline levels, according to Morgan Stanley data.
Tencent appears positioned advantageously in the agentic AI landscape, leveraging its WeChat platform and extensive consumer data assets. This represents a fundamental competitive challenge Alibaba cannot easily overcome in the near term.
The quarter also brought an unexpected personnel change. Junyang Lin, principal architect of Alibaba’s Qwen AI systems and a critical contributor to the company’s AI transformation, departed during the period. While official reasons remain undisclosed, the exit prompted concerns regarding strategic continuity in Alibaba’s research initiatives.
Alibaba has pivoted toward emphasizing enterprise customers in response. The newly established Alibaba Token Hub division consolidates AI product offerings under unified management, granting Wu direct authority over the company’s AI monetization strategy.
Alibaba’s cloud pricing adjustment of up to 34% coincided with a comparable action by Baidu, which implemented AI cloud price increases reaching 30%.
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