Alibaba stock dropped 5% Friday as news broke that the Pentagon planned to add the e-commerce giant to a list of companies allegedly supporting China’s military. Baidu shares fell 2% on similar concerns.
Alibaba Group Holding Limited, BABA
The selloff intensified Monday when the Pentagon briefly published an updated roster on the US Federal Register. Alibaba shares slid more than 3% in Hong Kong trading.
The list included some of China’s biggest tech names. BYD and Baidu were both down about 1% as the roster appeared online.
The Pentagon removed the list minutes after publication. The agency offered no explanation for the withdrawal.
The document was marked “unpublished” shortly after appearing. Two Chinese memory chip leaders, ChangXin Memory Technologies and Yangtze Memory Technologies, were also removed from the roster.
The so-called 1260H list targets companies accused of aiding China’s military. First published in 2021, it now includes more than 130 entities spanning airlines, computer manufacturers, and construction firms.
While the designation doesn’t impose immediate sanctions, it carries weight. The Pentagon uses it to restrict companies from military contracts and research funding.
Alibaba pushed back hard against the designation. “We are not a Chinese military company nor part of any military-civil fusion strategy,” the company said in a statement. “We will take all available legal action against attempts to misrepresent our company.”
Baidu issued an equally forceful rejection. “We categorically reject the inclusion, which has no credible basis,” a spokesperson said. The company called suggestions of military ties “entirely baseless” and noted no evidence had been produced.
BYD, China’s top electric vehicle maker, didn’t respond to requests for comment sent outside business hours. The company’s inclusion marked the first time the list targeted China’s EV sector.
The 1260H designation serves as a red flag for US investors. It’s widely viewed as a potential precursor to more punitive trade restrictions.
The timing comes during heated debates in Washington over China tech policy. Three of China’s AI leaders—Alibaba, Baidu, and Tencent—now face designation as military-linked companies.
The move is almost certain to provoke Beijing. China has previously protested similar designations as unfair and politically motivated.
Several Chinese companies previously added to the list have filed lawsuits challenging their inclusion. The designation represents another friction point in US-China technological competition.
The list includes firms across multiple sectors. Airlines, shipping companies, and communications providers appear alongside tech giants.
The brief publication and quick withdrawal created confusion in markets. Investors are left uncertain about which companies will ultimately face designation.
The post Alibaba (BABA) Stock Tumbles 5% as Pentagon Flip-Flops on China Blacklist appeared first on CoinCentral.
Also read: How Is Tick Data Normalized and Distributed in Forex Trading Systems?