Chart Of The Day: Will China's Crackdown On Alibaba Crack The Stock?

 | Aug 16, 2022 22:32

Imagine if Coca-Cola's (NYSE:KO) secret recipe got out, allowing others to begin selling the most consumed soda in the world. Might that impact Coca-Cola's business?

Some of China's biggest tech companies were forced to share their algorithms with Beijing amid a crackdown on data abuse, potentially compromising closely guarded secrets. Many consider these algorithms a crucial component in what makes these companies successful. In recent years privacy issues have been at the heart of political controversies worldwide. So far, big tech companies in the West have kept regulators at bay, arguing their algorithms were trade secrets.

Moreover, the Chinese economy has been showing signs of cooling in the aftermath of its Zero-COVID policy. Retail sales grew 2.7% annually, almost half of the expected 5% forecast and industrial production rose by 3.8%, well below the 4.6% estimate and even last month's 3.9%.

The PBOC thought these figures were worrying and cut interest rates while other major central banks were raising them. This move surprised markets after policymakers resisted lowering borrowing costs after the country's economy stalled in the previous quarter amid the risk of rising debt, consumer inflation, and pressure on its currency.

Softbank (TYO:9984) also showed it had no confidence in China's economy and sold off its Alibaba (NYSE:BABA) shares, cutting its stake from 23.6% to 14.6%. This divestment is noteworthy, considering SoftBank's CEO Masayoshi Son has been famously fiercely bullish on China and unwinding the Japanese conglomerate's most famous investment. One of his best bets is a red flag.

Another institutional investor that dumped Alibaba is Bridgewater Associates, the world's largest hedge fund. Interestingly enough, Bridgewater shored up its positions in Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN), Meta Platforms (NASDAQ:META), and Alphabet (NASDAQ:GOOGL)—companies that have been able to retain their algorithms a secret.