Analyst Sounds Alarm on Alibaba Ahead of Earnings: Nvidia Chip Ban and Shrinking Margins Raise Concerns

MarketDash Editorial Team
13 days ago
As Alibaba prepares to report Q2 results, one analyst is pumping the brakes on enthusiasm, pointing to deteriorating cash flow margins and the competitive disadvantage of being shut out from Nvidia's cutting-edge AI chips.

Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. (BABA) is gearing up to report second-quarter earnings on Tuesday, and not everyone is feeling the optimism. While the stock has surged nearly 90% this year, independent investor Parkev Tatevosian, CFA, is urging investors to tap the brakes, citing a cocktail of macro headwinds and fundamental deterioration that could spell trouble for the Chinese e-commerce giant.

The Chip Problem Nobody Wants to Talk About

Here's where things get interesting. Alibaba is spending aggressively to expand its AI-optimized data center capacity, trying to keep pace with American hyperscalers. The problem? Export restrictions have completely shut the company out from Nvidia Corp.'s (NVDA) prized chips—you know, the ones everyone in tech would trade their firstborn to get their hands on.

Instead, Alibaba is stuck with chips from local service providers that, let's be honest, aren't exactly cutting edge. Tatevosian points out that the company is having to compensate by "utilizing larger clusters and larger buildings and larger scale in order to deliver similar results" with these inferior chips. It's like trying to win a Formula 1 race with a decent but decidedly slower car—you can still compete, but you're starting from behind relative to U.S.-based competitors who have access to the best hardware money can buy.

The Profit Squeeze Gets Real

Beyond the chip shortage drama, Alibaba's profitability metrics are telling a story that's hard to ignore. Tatevosian highlighted that the company's operating cash flow to sales ratio has been in a steady decline since 2016, when it peaked at an impressive 56%. Fast forward to the most recent trailing twelve-month period, and that figure has cratered to just 15%.

What's driving this collapse? Rising competition in the Chinese e-commerce industry has made it significantly harder for Alibaba to generate the kinds of returns it enjoyed in its glory days. When you're fighting tooth and nail for market share, margins tend to suffer—and Alibaba's numbers reflect exactly that reality.

One Analyst Sees Limited Upside

Despite the stock's impressive 89.21% year-to-date rally, Tatevosian isn't ready to jump on the bandwagon. He maintains a neutral stance, estimating the stock's fair value at $141 per share—which represents 12.27% downside from its current market price of $160.73. His conclusion? A "hold" rating, noting that the valuation isn't "especially attractive" with the added risk of an imminent earnings release that could go either way.

Wall Street Disagrees

Not everyone shares Tatevosian's caution. Prominent Wall Street analysts continue to maintain bullish stances on the stock heading into earnings. The consensus expects Alibaba to generate $34.43 billion in revenue, up from $33.70 billion last year. Earnings, however, are projected to drop to $0.81 per share from $2.15 in the prior year.

Goldman Sachs analysts maintained their buy rating while raising their price target to $205 from $179, representing upside of 27.54% from current levels. Similarly, Benchmark analyst Fawne Jiang recently reiterated a buy rating while raising their target to $195, implying 21.32% upside. The average consensus price target stands at $172.19—about 7.12% above where the stock trades now.

For what it's worth, Alibaba has beaten analyst consensus estimates for both revenue and earnings in 7 of its last 10 quarterly releases, so the company has a decent track record of delivering positive surprises.

A Bright Spot Amid the Concerns

Before the earnings release, Alibaba did hit one impressive milestone worth mentioning. The company's Qwen AI app got off to a blazing start with 10 million downloads in just its first week—a sign that despite the challenges, Alibaba still knows how to capture consumer attention when it launches new products.

Alibaba's shares climbed 5.10% on Monday, closing at $160.73, and gained another 0.94% in overnight trading. So while one analyst sees storm clouds gathering, the market—at least for now—seems more interested in the potential upside than the risks Tatevosian is highlighting.

Analyst Sounds Alarm on Alibaba Ahead of Earnings: Nvidia Chip Ban and Shrinking Margins Raise Concerns

MarketDash Editorial Team
13 days ago
As Alibaba prepares to report Q2 results, one analyst is pumping the brakes on enthusiasm, pointing to deteriorating cash flow margins and the competitive disadvantage of being shut out from Nvidia's cutting-edge AI chips.

Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. (BABA) is gearing up to report second-quarter earnings on Tuesday, and not everyone is feeling the optimism. While the stock has surged nearly 90% this year, independent investor Parkev Tatevosian, CFA, is urging investors to tap the brakes, citing a cocktail of macro headwinds and fundamental deterioration that could spell trouble for the Chinese e-commerce giant.

The Chip Problem Nobody Wants to Talk About

Here's where things get interesting. Alibaba is spending aggressively to expand its AI-optimized data center capacity, trying to keep pace with American hyperscalers. The problem? Export restrictions have completely shut the company out from Nvidia Corp.'s (NVDA) prized chips—you know, the ones everyone in tech would trade their firstborn to get their hands on.

Instead, Alibaba is stuck with chips from local service providers that, let's be honest, aren't exactly cutting edge. Tatevosian points out that the company is having to compensate by "utilizing larger clusters and larger buildings and larger scale in order to deliver similar results" with these inferior chips. It's like trying to win a Formula 1 race with a decent but decidedly slower car—you can still compete, but you're starting from behind relative to U.S.-based competitors who have access to the best hardware money can buy.

The Profit Squeeze Gets Real

Beyond the chip shortage drama, Alibaba's profitability metrics are telling a story that's hard to ignore. Tatevosian highlighted that the company's operating cash flow to sales ratio has been in a steady decline since 2016, when it peaked at an impressive 56%. Fast forward to the most recent trailing twelve-month period, and that figure has cratered to just 15%.

What's driving this collapse? Rising competition in the Chinese e-commerce industry has made it significantly harder for Alibaba to generate the kinds of returns it enjoyed in its glory days. When you're fighting tooth and nail for market share, margins tend to suffer—and Alibaba's numbers reflect exactly that reality.

One Analyst Sees Limited Upside

Despite the stock's impressive 89.21% year-to-date rally, Tatevosian isn't ready to jump on the bandwagon. He maintains a neutral stance, estimating the stock's fair value at $141 per share—which represents 12.27% downside from its current market price of $160.73. His conclusion? A "hold" rating, noting that the valuation isn't "especially attractive" with the added risk of an imminent earnings release that could go either way.

Wall Street Disagrees

Not everyone shares Tatevosian's caution. Prominent Wall Street analysts continue to maintain bullish stances on the stock heading into earnings. The consensus expects Alibaba to generate $34.43 billion in revenue, up from $33.70 billion last year. Earnings, however, are projected to drop to $0.81 per share from $2.15 in the prior year.

Goldman Sachs analysts maintained their buy rating while raising their price target to $205 from $179, representing upside of 27.54% from current levels. Similarly, Benchmark analyst Fawne Jiang recently reiterated a buy rating while raising their target to $195, implying 21.32% upside. The average consensus price target stands at $172.19—about 7.12% above where the stock trades now.

For what it's worth, Alibaba has beaten analyst consensus estimates for both revenue and earnings in 7 of its last 10 quarterly releases, so the company has a decent track record of delivering positive surprises.

A Bright Spot Amid the Concerns

Before the earnings release, Alibaba did hit one impressive milestone worth mentioning. The company's Qwen AI app got off to a blazing start with 10 million downloads in just its first week—a sign that despite the challenges, Alibaba still knows how to capture consumer attention when it launches new products.

Alibaba's shares climbed 5.10% on Monday, closing at $160.73, and gained another 0.94% in overnight trading. So while one analyst sees storm clouds gathering, the market—at least for now—seems more interested in the potential upside than the risks Tatevosian is highlighting.

    Analyst Sounds Alarm on Alibaba Ahead of Earnings: Nvidia Chip Ban and Shrinking Margins Raise Concerns - MarketDash News