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    Alibaba bears pounce as short-sellers hint figures too good to be true

    (Agencies) Updated: 2016-06-14 07:14

    Alibaba bears pounce as short-sellers hint figures too good to be true

    Founder and Executive Chairman of Alibaba Group Holding Ltd Jack Ma rings a bell to celebrate as the Alibaba stock goes live during the company's initial price offering at the New York Stock Exchange on Sept 19, 2014. [Photo/Getty Images]

    Leading short-sellers have long been hinting that firm's growth figures are too good to be true

    Traders have never been more bearish on Alibaba Group Holding Ltd, the fast-growing Chinese e-commerce company facing a regulatory probe and the loss of a key investor.

    The total number of outstanding shares borrowed for short selling peaked at more than 124 million last week. That's the most since its 2014 initial public offering and is up from about 60 million in December, according to data compiled by Bloomberg and Markit Ltd.

    Prominent short sellers including Jim Chanos and John Hempton have been red-flagging Alibaba for months, suggesting that its growth figures might be too good to be true. Bearish bets spiked in the past two weeks after the company disclosed a regulatory probe of its Chinese delivery unit and SoftBank Group Corp disclosed plans to sell a $10 billion stake.

    "There's been an accumulation of factors making it more and more attractive for short sellers to target Alibaba, while the SEC investigation and SoftBank share sale added a lot of pressure," said Gil Luria, an analyst at Wedbush Securities Inc in Los Angeles, who has a neutral rating on the stock.

    "If the SEC was to find Alibaba's accounting isn't proper and Alibaba has to restate its results, that'll be very detrimental. Because Alibaba's so high profile, it will cast an even greater shadow of Chinese companies listed in the US."

    Alibaba, which claimed more than 75 percent of the e-commerce market share in the Chinese mainland last year, made history with a record $25 billion initial public offering in September 2014. Traders in New York clamored for the stock, which was priced at $68 a share, as a way to tap into the potential profits available from the country's growing middle class.

    The shares have dropped 6.4 percent to $75.92 since May 25 when the company said that the SEC is looking at data reported from the company's Singles Day (Nov 11) promotion, Alibaba's biggest shopping day, and how the company consolidates results from affiliates, including logistics partner Cainiao Network.

    While SoftBank's divestment comes as part of a broader strategy to find new investments in startups and strengthen its debt-heavy balance sheet, the move can be unsettling to investors as the Japanese technology giant first bought into the company 16 years ago, said Henry Guo, a New York-based analyst at M Science.

    "The stake sale by SoftBank caught the market off guard, which dampened Alibaba shares as it's one of the early investors," said Guo, who has been covering Chinese internet stocks traded in the US for about 10 years and has a positive outlook on Alibaba.

    Chanos, the hedge fund manager who became known for betting against Enron Corp in 2001, told CNBC last month that he's shorting Alibaba "for accounting reasons". Hempton, of Sydney-based fund Bronte Capital, raised questions about the company's accounting in a blog post last year, calling its numbers "wonky".

    Hempton declined to comment beyond what he said in the blog post, and Chanos didn't respond to an e-mail and phone calls. Alibaba spokesman Robert Christie also declined to comment.

    Most analysts covering Alibaba remain bullish. Thirty-seven of them advise buying the stock, while six rate it hold, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. It has no sell ratings.

    The company posted better-than-expected sales of 24.2 billion yuan ($3.7 billion) in the March quarter. Its platforms, which link buyers and sellers, hit a 3 trillion yuan milestone of goods sold during the period, according to its earnings statement.

    "The reality of Alibaba's strong position in e-commerce in China and the dramatic and rapid move to e-commerce in China set the stage for strong earnings," said David Riedel, president of New York-based Riedel Research Group Inc who rates the stock a buy.

    Alibaba also remains relatively cheap compared with global peers. The stock sells for 23 times projected 12-month earnings, compared with an average multiple of 51 among seven comparable e-commerce providers, including Amazon.com Inc, data compiled by Bloomberg show. The average 12-month price target of analysts covering the stock implies a potential return of 22 percent.

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