Alibaba Group Holding shares rose the most in two months as investors cheered the e-commerce company’s plan to earn more service fees from merchants.
The stock gained as much as 5.8 per cent in Hong Kong on news that Alibaba will start charging a basic software service fee of 0.6 per cent on confirmed transactions for vendors on both the Tmall and Taobao platforms.
The policy change was relayed to merchants on Friday (Jul 26), according to a person familiar with the matter. But Alibaba may waive the new policy for small merchants, the person said.
The new measure will boost Alibaba’s core merchant revenue and add to multiple catalysts for the stock, according to Jefferies Financial Group. The company earns the majority of its Taobao and Tmall revenue through customer management fees, which merchants pay to advertise products or better tailor their offerings.
“We view the 0.6 per cent software service fees starting in September as positive to core merchant revenue, considering the new arrangement applies to both Taobao and Tmall,” Jefferies analysts led by Thomas Chong wrote in a research note on Sunday.
The shift to a percentage-based fee structure, first reported by local media LatePost, makes Alibaba the last major e-commerce platform to do so. PDD Holdings started charging merchants a technical service fee of about 0.6 to 1 per cent of gross merchandise value since 2020, while JD.com and ByteDance both levied a 0.6 per cent fee rate last year.
Alibaba currently charges a fixed annual amount to Tmall merchants, which will be waived once the new policy takes effect from Sep 1. Alibaba will also offer vendors other support measures, including an adjustment in criteria for traffic allocation and free refund policies.
The stock is the biggest gainer on the benchmark Hang Seng Index, which is up as much as 2 per cent. Bloomberg