
We previously initiated coverage on Alibaba's bonds: Credit Update: Alibaba’s fortress balance sheet anchors its credit profile amid elevated AI spend
Since then, Alibaba released its FY26 (ending March 31, 2026) results. In this article, we examine the group’s latest earnings and provide an updated take on its outstanding bonds.
1. China E-commerce: Profitability for main earnings anchor stabilising, Quick Commerce on Path to Breakeven
• Customer management revenue (CMR)– fees charged to merchants for advertising and promotional placements on Taobao and Tmall– grew 8% YoY on a like-for-like basis in Q4FY26 (quarter ending March 31, 2026). The reported 1% headline growth reflects an accounting reclassification; whereby merchant subsidies are now netted against CMR as contra-revenue rather than booked as marketing expenses.
• China E-commerce adjusted EBITA declined 40% YoY in Q4FY26 (FY26: -44% YoY), with FY26 EBITA margins contracting to 19% (FY25: 44%). As highlighted in our previous coverage, this segment’s margins and EBITA were hampered by the intense price war and the growth of its Quick Commerce segment.
• Encouragingly, we note a steady QoQ decline in selling and marketing expenses as a percentage of the group’s overall topline at 22% for Q426 (Q226: 27%, Q326: 25%), possibly suggesting peak subsidy intensity may be behind us. We also point out management’s commentary that, excluding quick commerce loss, E-commerce adjusted EBITA was “stable”.
• Quick commerce unit economics (UE) are improving sequentially. Average order value rose QoQ, driven by order mix optimisation, while maintaining market share. Promisingly, management has also guided for UE will turn positive by the end of FY27 (31 March 2027), framing the trajectory as efficiency-driven rather than subsidy-driven. Notably, this represents an acceleration of the timeline to profitability, compared to the previously guided FY29.
• Looking forward, while adjusted EBITA for this segment might fluctuate every quarter, we still expect this segment to be the main earnings anchor for the group (contribution mix for the group’s overall EBITA actually rose to 141% from FY25’s 113%), supported by the decline in subsidies provided by the group and the positive momentum shown by quick commerce’s UE. Overall, we still think this segment’s margins should normalise toward the 30% range, although we are mindful that this process could take some time.
2. Cloud / AI: Strong growth, with a Clear Monetisation Path
• Cloud Intelligence Group external revenue grew 40% YoY to RMB 41.6b, accelerating from the 34–36% range seen in 2Q26 and 3Q26, which we cited in our previous update. Full-year Cloud revenue reached RMB 158.1b (+34% YoY).
• AI revenue hit RMB 9.0b in Q4 alone (representing an annualised run-rate of RMB 36.0b) — the 11th consecutive quarter of triple-digit YOY growth — now representing 30% of external revenue. Management has also guided that AI revenue will cross 50% of external cloud revenue within approximately one year, becoming the primary growth engine.
• Looking ahead, the cloud / AI segment’s margin profile should improve materially as Model and Application Services' annual recurring revenue is expected to surpass RMB 10b in 1Q27 and RMB 30b by year-end – a revenue stream that management explicitly noted carries structurally higher gross margins. This shift is reinforced by T-Head’s proprietary Zhenwu inference chips, which reduce input costs and provide supply chain autonomy in a compute-scarce environment. With AI revenue guided to cross 50% of external cloud revenue within approximately one year, the blended EBITA margin for this segment (currently 9.1%) has a credit path toward low-to-mid teens over the medium term, which represents a durable diversified earnings stream for Alibaba other than its China E-commerce segment.
3. All Others' Losses — A significant detractor for the group’s EBITA; Elevated but Largely Transient
• All Others adjusted EBITA loss widened sharply to RMB 21.2b in Q4 FY26 (vs. RMB 3.4b in Q4 FY25), bringing the full-year loss to RMB 35.7b. The primary driver was the Qwen consumer app, which included a CNY promotional campaign to drive downloads — a discrete, concentrated spend rather than a structural recurring cost.
• The initial acquisition phase appears to be maturing. Qwen app surpassed 300 million MAUs and completed deep integrations with Taobao, Alipay, Amap, and Fliggy as of May 2026. With distribution now embedded across the ecosystem, the need for heavy standalone user acquisition subsidies should now moderate. That said, we note that management did not explicitly commit to reducing Qwen-related spend, leaving some uncertainty on the trajectory of All Other losses in the near term.
• Nevertheless, even under a scenario where All Others' losses remain higher at an average of RMB 20+b annually (historical EBITA losses over FY23-FY25), the group's balance sheet and the improving EBITA contribution from the cloud segment should provide ample headroom. Overall, we do not expect EBITA losses from this segment to materially impact the group’s credit profile.
4. Liquidity and Credit Metrics: Balance Sheet Anchors the Credit
• Net cash (accounting for cash and equivalents and short-term investments maturing over the next 12 months) stands at approximately RMB 38b as of March 2026 — down from RMB 45b as of December 2025, reflecting the elevated capex cycle. Given the group’s current net cash position, we see little risk in the group’s ability to meet its short-term debt (RMB 28.2b over the next year) and do not expect any immediate refinancing risk.
• On the cash flow front, we note the sharp 53% YoY decline in operating cash flow (OCF) to RMB 76b (FY25: RMB 164b), mainly due to the intense price war and growth of the group’s quick-commerce business, as highlighted above. Full-year FY26 free cash flow (FCF) swung negative to RMB -47b (FY25: RMB 74b), with full-year capex of RMB 123b (+46% YoY). Looking ahead, we continue to expect OCF to stabilise, given the improvements shown in the UE of quick commerce and growing contribution from the cloud segment. That said, FCF should remain pressured due to management's investment in quick commerce and AI capex investment.
• Interest coverage (adjusted EBITA / gross interest expense) has moderated to an estimated 8x (compared to Dec 25’s TTM of 10x and FY25’s 18x). That said, we remain comfortable with this metric, as group EBITA stabilises on the back of improving quick commerce UE and increasing contribution from the cloud segment.
Bond recommendations
• Alibaba's credit profile has softened moderately since our initial update, but the thesis remains intact. The investment cycle is deeper and longer than initially estimated, but the drivers — quick commerce scaling and Qwen app distribution build-out — are strategic and time-bound rather than structural deterioration. The net cash position provides a solid buffer, and Cloud/AI is seeing increasing monetisation.
• Looking at intermediate-dated BABA bonds (2030–2035 maturities), these issues offer yields-to-worst ranging from 4.23–5.10%, representing a 30+–60+ bps spread over comparable US Treasuries. Against Chinese tech peers, we find Alibaba’s bonds to be fairly priced. For investors looking for an alternative to US sovereigns, Alibaba’s outstanding bonds are a worthwhile consideration, given the improving operating outlook.
Table 1: Alibaba Bonds vs. Chinese Technology Peers
|
Issue |
Issuer |
Ask Price |
Yield to Worst (%) |
Years to Maturity |
Credit Rating (S&P / Moody’s / Fitch) |
|
Alibaba Group Holding Limited |
98.84 |
4.19% |
1.54 |
A+ / A1 / A |
|
|
Alibaba Group Holding Limited |
101.58 |
4.43% |
4.01 |
A+ / A1 / A |
|
|
Alibaba Group Holding Limited |
90.09 |
4.49% |
4.72 |
A+ / A1 / A |
|
|
Alibaba Group Holding Limited |
97.35 |
4.88% |
8.53 |
A+ / A1 / A |
|
|
Alibaba Group Holding Limited |
101.43 |
5.05% |
9.02 |
A+ / A1 / A |
|
|
Baidu Inc |
99.99 |
4.38% |
1.85 |
- / A3 / A |
|
|
Baidu Inc |
96.28 |
4.48% |
3.88 |
- / A3 / A |
|
|
JD.com, Inc. |
96.62 |
4.39% |
3.65 |
A- / A3 / - |
|
|
Kuaishou Technology |
98.24 |
4.55% |
4.67 |
A- / A3 / A- |
|
|
Kuaishou Technology |
95.92 |
5.29% |
9.68 |
A- / A3 / A- |
|
|
Meituan |
99.67 |
4.69% |
1.87 |
BBB+ / Baa1 / BBB+ |
|
|
Meituan |
92.05 |
5.08% |
4.44 |
BBB+ / Baa1 / BBB+ |
|
|
Meituan |
97.33 |
5.12% |
4.96 |
BBB+ / Baa1 / BBB+ |
|
|
Meituan |
96.14 |
5.66% |
9.46 |
BBB+ / Baa1 / BBB+ |
|
|
Tencent Holdings Limited |
99.09 |
4.17% |
1.67 |
A+ / A1 / A |
|
|
Tencent Holdings Limited |
92.78 |
4.37% |
4.04 |
A+ / A1 / A |
|
|
Tencent Holdings Limited |
93.52 |
4.36% |
4.92 |
A+ / A1 / A |
|
|
Weibo Corporation |
93.51 |
5.14% |
4.13 |
BBB / Baa2 / - |
|
|
Xiaomi Best Time International Limited |
95.16 |
4.74% |
3.94 |
BBB / Baa1 / BBB+ |
|
|
Xiaomi Best Time International Limited |
91.44 |
4.77% |
5.15 |
BBB / Baa1 / BBB+ |
|
|
Data as of 21 May 2026. Source: Bloomberg, Bondsupermart, iFAST compilations. |
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Declaration: For specific disclosure, at the time of publication of this report, IFPL (via its connected and associated entities) holds NIL positions and the analyst who produced this report holds NIL positions in the abovementioned securities. This research report was prepared with the assistance of artificial intelligence (AI) tools. iFAST Financial Pte Ltd does not rely exclusively on AI for content generation; the content of this report — including all investment theses, ratings, price targets and conclusions — has been independently reviewed and verified by the research analyst(s) to ensure accuracy and professional integrity.
