BABA

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BABA
$130,85
-$1,67(-1,26%)

*Data last updated: 2026-04-29 00:31 (UTC+8)

As of 2026-04-29 00:31, Alibaba (BABA) is priced at $130,85, with a total market cap of $303,66B, a P/E ratio of 17,32, and a dividend yield of 1,55%. Today, the stock price fluctuated between $128,96 and $130,92. The current price is 1,46% above the day's low and 0,05% below the day's high, with a trading volume of 5,51M. Over the past 52 weeks, BABA has traded between $103,71 to $192,67, and the current price is -32,08% away from the 52-week high.

BABA Key Stats

Yesterday's Close$132,52
Market Cap$303,66B
Volume5,51M
P/E Ratio17,32
Dividend Yield (TTM)1,55%
Dividend Amount$2,00
Diluted EPS (TTM)4,86
Net Income (FY)$130,10B
Revenue (FY)$996,34B
Earnings Date2026-05-14
EPS Estimate0,98
Revenue Estimate$35,80B
Shares Outstanding2,29B
Beta (1Y)0.489
Ex-Dividend Date2025-06-12
Dividend Payment Date2025-07-10

About BABA

Alibaba Group Holding Limited, through its subsidiaries, provides technology infrastructure and marketing reach to help merchants, brands, retailers, and other businesses to engage with their users and customers in the People's Republic of China and internationally. The company operates through seven segments: China Commerce, International Commerce, Local Consumer Services, Cainiao, Cloud, Digital Media and Entertainment, and Innovation Initiatives and Others. It operates Taobao and Tmall, which are digital retail platforms; Alimama, a proprietary monetization platform; 1688.com and Alibaba.com, which are online wholesale marketplaces; AliExpress, a retail marketplace; Lazada, Trendyol, and Daraz that are e-commerce platforms; Freshippo, a retail platform for groceries and fresh goods; and Tmall Global, an import e-commerce platform. The company also operates Cainiao Network logistic services platform; Ele.me, an on-demand delivery and local services platform; Koubei, a restaurant and local services guide platform; and Fliggy, an online travel platform. In addition, it offers pay-for-performance, in-feed, and display marketing services; and Taobao Ad Network and Exchange, a real-time online bidding marketing exchange. Further, the company provides elastic computing, storage, network, security, database, big data, and IoT services; and hardware, software license, software installation, and application development and maintenance services. Additionally, it operates Youku, an online video platform; Quark, a platform for information search, storage, and consumption; Alibaba Pictures and other content platforms that provide online videos, films, live events, news feeds, literature, music, and others; Amap, a mobile digital map, navigation, and real-time traffic information app; DingTalk, a business efficiency mobile app; Tmall Genie smart speaker; and Qwen, an artificial intelligence chatbot. The company was incorporated in 1999 and is based in Hangzhou, the People's Republic of China.
SectorConsumer Cyclical
IndustrySpecialty Retail
CEOYongming Wu
HeadquartersHangzhou,None,CN

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Alibaba (BABA) is currently trading at $130,85, with a 24h change of -1,26%. The 52-week trading range is $103,71–$192,67.

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Hot Posts su Alibaba (BABA)

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04-27 21:27
Microsoft’s Brad Smith says U.S. firms should "worry" about China’s AI subsidies ================================================================================ Vlad Schepkov Thu, February 19, 2026 at 3:53 AM GMT+9 1 min read In this article: * StockStory Top Pick MSFT +0.82% * ZTCOF +17.14% BABA +1.19% ERIC +0.10% NOK +1.56% Investing.com -- Microsoft President Brad Smith cautioned that American tech companies should "worry a little bit" about subsidies Chinese competitors receive from their government in the artificial intelligence race. Speaking at the AI Impact Summit in New Delhi, Smith acknowledged that while the U.S. has "an advantage in terms of access to the most powerful chips in the world" and "other technology innovation," Chinese government subsidies pose a competitive challenge. "I do think we always have to think about, maybe even worry a little bit about Chinese subsidies," Smith told CNBC in an interview. Smith drew parallels to China's previous strategy in telecommunications, where state support helped companies like Huawei and ZTE expand globally. "Some American companies disappeared. European companies like Ericsson and Nokia were thrown on the defensive," he noted. The Microsoft executive pointed out that data centers from Chinese firms Huawei and Alibaba already exist worldwide, making it relatively easy for China to extend subsidies to these operations. "I think for the rest of us, we have to compete with that, and we have to be good at competing with that, with the support of our governments," Smith said. Chinese AI companies have received substantial government backing through measures including a multi-billion-dollar national investment fund and vouchers for reduced energy costs for their computing needs. This support comes as Chinese firms have released numerous AI models over the past two weeks. Related articles Microsoft’s Brad Smith says U.S. firms should "worry" about China’s AI subsidies Goldman expects lower but still attractive stock market returns in 2026 Morgan Stanley CIO survey: Why AI hype isn’t boosting 2026 IT budgets Terms and Privacy Policy Privacy Dashboard More Info
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