Alibaba launched a major investment program worth 2 billion yuan, or about $281 million, to expand its instant commerce operations across China. The company plans to upgrade existing local convenience stores under the Taobao brand rather than building new locations from scratch.
Alibaba Group Holding Limited, BABA
Store owners participating in the program will receive support from multiple Alibaba platforms. This includes access to the 1688.com wholesale site and supply chain services from the Aoxiang platform. The upgrades aim to help shops manage inventory more efficiently and deliver orders faster to customers.
The company’s goal is clear. Every partner store should provide one-stop, 24-hour service with delivery completed within 30 minutes.
The first Taobao-branded stores opened in Hangzhou and Nanjing. Alibaba plans to roll out this program to more than 200 cities throughout China. Hu Qiugen, who leads Alibaba’s instant commerce division, described the initiative as a win-win situation for both the company and local businesses.
The program provides small businesses with new customers and digital tools. For Alibaba, it creates a physical network to support its growing instant commerce operations.
This investment builds on the success of Taobao Shangou, Alibaba’s platform for delivering groceries and daily essentials. The service has grown to 300 million monthly users. Daily orders recently hit 120 million.
CEO Eddie Wu said the company wants to increase user activity and improve customer experience. Competition in China’s instant commerce market continues to heat up. An institute under China’s Ministry of Commerce projects the market will reach 2 trillion yuan in size.
Alibaba’s latest move shows it wants a larger piece of this expanding market. The strategy connects online shopping with offline retail under the Taobao name.
The stock has performed well this year, more than doubling in value. The gains come largely from the company’s AI-powered cloud business and growing instant delivery operations.
Cathie Wood’s ARK Invest recently bought a large position in Alibaba shares. This reflects growing confidence in the company’s direction.
Analysts from Jefferies and Mizuho have raised their price targets for the stock. Thomas Chong and Wei Fang cited strong performance in AI and cloud services. They also pointed to Alibaba’s expanding presence in the banking sector.
Wall Street expects the company to report Q2 FY26 earnings of $0.85 per share. Revenue projections stand at $34.36 billion for the quarter.
Analysts covering the stock remain bullish on its prospects. The consensus rating stands at Strong Buy, with 19 Buy ratings and two Hold ratings. The average price target of $198.21 suggests about 16.30% upside from current levels.
The post Alibaba (BABA) Stock: Company Invests $281 Million in 30-Minute Delivery Push appeared first on CoinCentral.
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