B2B firm gets millions after private placement
By Liu Baijia, China Daily
One of China\'s biggest business-to-business (B2B) Internet companies has raised US$82 million in a new round of private placement, helping it grow as an industry leader globally and fend off challengers.
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| Jack Ma, chairman and chief executive officer of Alibaba.com. [newsphoto/file] |
He declined to say how much each contributed to the placement, but said the shareholder structure of the company has not changed a great deal, with the management and employees of Alibaba remaining as the biggest stakeholders.
\"This placement is a very important step in our strategy,\" Ma said.
With affluent capital at hand, the Hangzhou-based Internet company is capable of spending more resources on fostering the e-commerce market in China.
Ma said the first chunk of the capital will be used to improve its TrustPass programme, which aims to verify the creditability of Chinese companies.
Alibaba has attracted more than 30,000 TrustPass users since 2002, who each pay 2,300 yuan (US$278) per year.
Ma said his company will also put more effort into e-commerce technologies and marketing.
The Chinese B2B firm spent US$37 million on building an e-commerce software development centre in Hangzhou.
In November, it released its instant messaging tool, Alitalk, to help business clients talk over the Internet.
Alibaba will also unveil its search engine in March, which will enable customers to find their business partners and products on the Chinese company\'s website.
\"A war in China\'s e-commerce market is imminent, so we must shore up ammunitions for that,\" Ma said.
According to Alibaba\'s founder, the company now has much more than US$100 million in cash-at-hand, which will help it to fend off threats form home and abroad.
He said Alibaba does not face any real challenge in terms of B2B business, but in the customer-to-customer (C2C) area, there are already some \"quite strong rivals.\"
Alibaba founded its C2C Taobao.com in July, mainly targetting the online auction market. It has 900,000 listings a day and peak traffic of 120,000 people simultaneously.
However, it still lags behind Shanghai-based Eachnet.com, bought by US giant eBay for US$180 million.
At the same time, Yahoo.com and Chinese Internet portal Sina Corp also announced in January to form an online auction joint venture.
\"Just like the fast growth of online advertising and wireless messaging services in the past two years, we believe that this year it will be e-commerce\'s turn,\" said Hurst Lin, chief operating officer of Sina Corp.
Ma said Alibaba more than tripled its revenues in 2003, to about 360 million yuan (US$43.48 million), and had a positive cash flow of more than 100 million yuan (US$12 million). It is aiming to generate a positive cash flow of 1 million yuan (US$120,000) every day in 2004 and pay 1 million yuan in taxes for each day of 2005.