The Business of Fashion
Agenda-setting intelligence, analysis and advice for the global fashion community.
Agenda-setting intelligence, analysis and advice for the global fashion community.
Alibaba Group Holding Ltd’s $5 billion US dollar bond offering received demand for eight times the debt offered, underscoring global investors’ faith in founder Jack Ma’s e-commerce behemoth despite a regulatory crackdown on his empire.
Pricing for the deal was set on Friday tighter than initially flagged by the company on Thursday, indicating robust demand to buy the rare debt float. The latest international bond offering is Alibaba’s third, according to data from Refinitiv.
Several sovereign wealth funds were among the buyers, along with high profile US long-only funds, a person with direct knowledge of the deal told Reuters, adding demand was “extremely strong” across the various maturity-tranches.
The company did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the oversubscription rate or the nature of its investors.
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Investor response to the deal was seen as a sentiment test towards Alibaba amid regulatory heat for billionaire Ma’s business empire, triggered by a speech in late October in which he publicly criticised the country’s regulatory system.
That set off a chain of events that resulted in the halting of affiliate Ant Group’s $37 billion stock market listing. Authorities also launched an antitrust probe into the tech sector, with Alibaba firmly in the crosshairs.
Ma subsequently disappeared from public view for three months.
Alibaba required permission from China’s central economic planner, the National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC), to issue the bonds, the source said, giving investors confidence the regulators were not cracking down too heavily on the company.
“Ant Group seems to be reaching some kind of progress and Jack Ma was out in public, so there was a sense that the clouds are clearing,” the source said, declining to be named as they were not authorised to speak to the media.
The $5 billion was raised in four tranches of 10-, 20-, 30- and 40-year debt. Alibaba decided to tighten pricing by 30 to 40 basis points, double the usual amount from initial pricing for U.S. investment grade bonds, on strong demand, according to the final terms.
Alibaba had flagged it would use the money to help pay down offshore debt and fund future potential acquisitions and investments in “complementary businesses”.
“Alibaba does not need cash. It does look like many of the tech companies are trying to take advantage of the low interest-rate environment,” analyst Mitchell Kim, who publishes on independent investment research network Smartkarma told Reuters.
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The 10-year bond raised $1.5 billion and was priced at US 10-year Treasuries plus 100 basis points, while a 20-year tranche, Alibaba’s first sustainable bond raised $1 billion at 100 basis points over the benchmark.
A higher proportion of Asian investors bought into this deal than the last time the company issued US dollar debt in 2017, which was dominated by US buyers at that time, the source said.
By Scott Murdoch; Editing by Lincoln Feast.
With consumers tightening their belts in China, the battle between global fast fashion brands and local high street giants has intensified.
Investors are bracing for a steep slowdown in luxury sales when luxury companies report their first quarter results, reflecting lacklustre Chinese demand.
The French beauty giant’s two latest deals are part of a wider M&A push by global players to capture a larger slice of the China market, targeting buzzy high-end brands that offer products with distinctive Chinese elements.
Post-Covid spend by US tourists in Europe has surged past 2019 levels. Chinese travellers, by contrast, have largely favoured domestic and regional destinations like Hong Kong, Singapore and Japan.