Alibaba is navigating a thicket of simultaneous challenges — a US legal battle over its designation as a military-linked firm, new Chinese AI restrictions, a serious accusation from OpenAI, and the fallout from a ferocious price war in instant retail. Yet the stock has shown resilience, with shares recently closing at €99.10, up 1.02% on the day and extending a 14.6% weekly rally — the strongest such move since September.
Pentagon Lawsuit and a Temporary Reprieve
The company filed a lawsuit in a federal court in San Jose against the US Department of Defense, contesting its inclusion on the Section 1260H list, which labels entities as “Chinese military companies.” The Pentagon added Alibaba to the list in June 2026, a move the company argues was made without sufficient evidence and violates due process and free speech rights. Alibaba also denies any connection to China’s state asset regulator SASAC or the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology.
On July 5, a court granted Alibaba interim relief, suspending related lobbying prohibitions. The case draws on a precedent set by Xiaomi, which successfully challenged the same list in 2021 and was later removed. The legal victory, while preliminary, has removed one cloud of uncertainty — at least for now.
AI Regulation Tightens as OpenAI Cuts Ties
On the domestic front, Alibaba is adjusting its AI business to comply with new Chinese regulations aimed at curbing emotional dependence on AI systems and restricting certain content for minors. Starting July 15, the company will disable the “human-like” features of its Qwen model. In a broader industry move, Alibaba joined 30 other Chinese internet firms in July to sign a self-commitment agreement setting new standards for data security and personal information protection in AI agents.
Overseas, Alibaba faces a different sort of backlash. OpenAI has suspended Alibaba’s accounts, accusing it of “distillation” — using outputs from OpenAI’s models to train its own systems. Alibaba denies the allegation and continues to push ahead with its AI commercialization plans.
Cloud Business Shines Brightest
Despite the regulatory and legal noise, institutional confidence remains intact. On July 9, Alibaba bought back 72,800 of its own shares on the New York Stock Exchange for about $996,000. Analysts are focusing on the cloud division, which is expected to report a 45% year-on-year increase in external cloud revenue for the June quarter — well above the earlier estimate of 38%. AI services now account for roughly 30% of that revenue, and Alibaba expects that share to top 50% within a year.
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The Price of a Delivery War
Meanwhile, Alibaba is waging an expensive battle in China’s instant retail market — rapid delivery of groceries and daily essentials — against Meituan and JD.com. Between the second quarter of 2025 and the first quarter of 2026, the segment burned through about 87 billion yuan (roughly $12.9 billion), more than its two rivals combined. The cost hit Alibaba’s fourth fiscal quarter earnings: revenue grew just 3% and adjusted net profit collapsed 99.7%.
But there are signs management believes the worst is over. Daily active users in the instant retail business have stabilised above 100 million, though that’s 30–40% below last summer’s peak. Fan Jiang, who runs the unit, recently said the division should turn profitable before the end of fiscal 2027. Alibaba is also reportedly offering $1.5 billion to acquire Pupu, China’s last major independent fresh-food e-commerce platform, in a move to consolidate supply chain assets rather than continue burning cash in parallel.
DOJ Settlement Clears Another Hurdle
Alibaba and its US payments arm have also reached a $600 million settlement with the US Department of Justice without any charges being filed. That resolves a substantial legal overhang, providing a clear — if hefty — cost to put a regulatory risk behind it.
Stock Still Trapped in a Wide Range
The recent rally has lifted Alibaba shares about 23% from the 52-week low of €79.50 reached in June, but the stock remains 39% below its October 2025 high of €161.60. It trades nearly 20% below its 200-day moving average of €123.53 and about 4.6% under its 50-day average. With a 30-day annualised volatility of 45.29 and an RSI of 58.1, the market is clearly torn.
The consensus analyst price target stands at €167.34, implying upside of roughly 70% from current levels — an unusually wide gap even for a volatile stock. For now, Alibaba’s market capitalisation sits at €235.39 billion, a valuation that reflects both promise and peril. The next quarterly report, due in August, will test whether the company can start translating its heavy investments into sustainable profitability.
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