Massive Chinese tech company Alibaba (NYSE: BABA) was looking rather diminished on the U.S. stock market in March. Investors weren’t cheered by a report that the U.S. government might impose limits on crucial artificial intelligence (AI) technology to Chinese companies, nor were they satisfied with Alibaba’s latest earnings report. Over the month, the company’s stock fell by nearly 13%.
That tumble started early in March. On the month’s first trading day, Bloomberg published a report stating that the Trump administration was considering limits on exports of AI accelerator chips to China.
Will AI create the world’s first trillionaire? Our team just released a report on the one little-known company, called an “Indispensable Monopoly” providing the critical technology Nvidia and Intel both need. Continue »
Citing unidentified “people familiar with the matter,” the business news agency wrote that federal government officials were considering a combined export limit of 75,000 next-generation Nvidia H200 and Advanced Micro Devices MI325 chips for each Chinese company.
This would clearly and directly affect the sprawling Alibaba, which has poured considerable resources into developing its Qwen AI models and shows no signs of retreating from that technology.
The tech giant’s stock took another blow toward the end of March, when it took the wraps off its fiscal third quarter of 2026 results.
For the period, Alibaba’s revenue was just under 285 billion yuan ($41.4 billion), up 2% year over year. Net income not under generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP) fell much more steeply, tumbling by 67% to 16.7 billion yuan ($2.4 billion), shaking out to 7.09 yuan ($1.03) per each of the company’s American Depositary Shares (ADSes).
Those figures didn’t compare favorably to the average analyst estimates. Alibaba missed both the consensus top-line projection of 289.7 billion yuan ($42.1 billion) and, especially, the collective 10.94 yuan ($1.59) per ADS forecast.
Much of the profitability decline can be chalked up to Alibaba’s aggressive push into the “quick commerce” retail segment, which is stuffed with ambitious competitors on the domestic market. That, combined with heavy spending on AI infrastructure and other factors, pushed the bottom line well below the ever-important consensus prognosticator estimate.
There has been a lot of smoke and noise about tariffs and limits on next-generation hardware, but the current U.S. presidential administration has frequently wavered on such matters. I wouldn’t buy or sell Alibaba on that basis.