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Alibaba Reportedly Planning T-Head Spinoff — Eyeing High China Chip Valuations?

China's leading e-commerce company is reportedly considering a spinoff and separate listing for its chip-making unit, following a similar plan by Baidu

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Key Takeaways:

  • Alibaba is reportedly weighing a plan to spin off and list its T-Head unit, hoping to join the ranks of other Chinese AI chipmakers with extremely high valuations
  • Shares of rival chipmaker Biren have nearly doubled since their Jan. 2 Hong Kong trading debut, while Moore Threads is up nearly fivefold since its December Shanghai listing

If it happens, the spinoff, often called "unlocking shareholder value," would come nearly three years after the company announced a much bigger plan to split itself into its six main divisions and make separate listings for some or all of those. Company watchers will know that plan ultimately got scrapped, and Alibaba has largely remained intact in its current form since then.

Others are standalone startups like Moore Threads (688795.SH), Cambricon (688256.SH) and Biren (6082.HK), whose shares have all soared lately. Since its listing on Jan. 2, Biren's shares have nearly doubled. Moore Threads are up more than fivefold since their December IPO. All three companies have triple-digit price-to-sales (P/S) ratios, with Moore Threads and Biren both above 200.

Still, you can't help wondering if these valuations are a bit over-the-top and due for a correction when the current stock market rallies in Hong Kong, Shanghai and Shenzhen finally subside.

Against that backdrop, it's no surprise that Alibaba may be putting its own plan to spin off T-Head on a fast track, seeking to ride the wave of inflated valuations and raise some big money to keep the unit humming. Nearly all of these GPU companies are massive money-burners, meaning capital markets are one of the main engines that allow them to keep working.

Joining Baidu

But Alibaba's recent rally has helped it catch Tencent in terms of price-to-earnings (P/E) ratios, with both companies now trading at 24 times, ahead of the 19 for takeout dining leader Meituan (3690.HK) and just 11 for PDD (PDD.US), owner of the Temu app.

It remains to be seen where T-Head and Kunlunxin might list. Our best guess is the pair would both target the more internationally focused Hong Kong, reflecting their global aspirations and also that market's more rational valuations. Meantime, you have to wonder if Huawei might also be considering a similar spinoff for HiSilicon, whose Kunlun chips are generally considered the most advanced in China.

A T-Head spinoff would continue a string of relatively positive developments for Alibaba, whose stock languished for a while after it scrapped its original breakup plan. The company's latest results showed its revenue rose 5% to 248 billion yuan ($35.6 billion) in the quarter through September, though the gain would have been 15% excluding two big brick-and-mortar retailing assets being sold off.

The bottom line is that Alibaba's latest spinoff plan is quite opportunistic, driven by the huge valuations investors are giving to Chinese AI chip makers right now. That step, together with the strong growth for the company's cloud and instant e-commerce stories, could provide some continued momentum for the stock as it tries to regain some of its former glory.

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Benzinga Disclaimer: This article is from an unpaid external contributor. It does not represent Benzinga’s reporting and has not been edited for content or accuracy.

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