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Company NameCORE16 Inc.
CEODavid Cho
Business Registration Number762-81-03235
Address83, Uisadang-daero, Yeongdeungpo-gu, Seoul, 07325, Republic of KOREA
Alibaba Group Holding ADR Representing 8
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SellSmartR
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9 hours ago
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When Nvidia Rises 4%, This AI Big Tech Gains 8%?
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Neutral
BABA
Alibaba Group Holding ADR Representing 8
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SellSmartR
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9 hours ago
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When Nvidia Rises 4%, This AI Big Tech Gains 8%?
Yesterday (15th), the S&P 500 and Dow Jones declined, but the Nasdaq reached a record high. The gain was largely driven by Nvidia, which rose 4% after the U.S. government approved resumed chip sales to China, boosting the broader tech sector. Interestingly, as Nvidia gained 4%, one Big Tech company jumped even higher—8%.One-Week Snapshot: China's AI GiantsAlibaba ADR (BABA) rose approximately 8.1% yesterday (15th). It wasn't alone—other U.S.-listed Chinese tech giants, including Tencent (TCEHY) and Baidu (BIDU), joined the surge. The common denominator? AI. At SellSmart, we're focused specifically on Alibaba. Why Alibaba? Globally recognized for e-commerce platforms like Taobao and AliExpress, Alibaba’s primary growth drivers—often overlooked by investors—are AI and cloud computing. Alibaba recently announced plans to invest approximately 380 billion yuan (around $53 billion) into cloud and AI infrastructure over the next three years, strategically expanding beyond e-commerce into logistics and fintech. In March, Alibaba released its open-source chatbot "QwQ-32B," followed in June by "Qwen VLo," a multimodal AI model enabling image generation—clear signals of aggressive moves into AI innovation.Year-to-Date Returns for China’s Big Tech AI TrioThe standout from Alibaba's Q1 2025 earnings was its rapidly growing Cloud Intelligence segment. Revenue jumped 18% year-over-year to 30.13 billion yuan, surpassing market expectations (29.9 billion yuan). Most notably, AI-driven revenue maintained triple-digit growth for the seventh consecutive quarter, underscoring Alibaba’s accelerating competitiveness in AI infrastructure and solutions. While overall revenue slightly missed forecasts—totaling 236.45 billion yuan versus 239.7 billion expected—adjusted EBITA came in strong at 32.62 billion yuan, exceeding market consensus (31.85 billion yuan). Momentum: Expanding AI ecosystem through collaboration with AppleApple needs AI capabilities to remain competitive in China but can only integrate AI approved by Chinese regulators into its "Apple Intelligence" ecosystem. On June 16, just four months after announcing their partnership, Alibaba released its Qwen-3 model optimized for Apple’s MLX machine learning framework. This positions Alibaba’s Qwen-3 to expand its AI footprint across China’s entire Apple ecosystem—including iPhones, iPads, and MacBooks. What is Qwen-3?Qwen-3, announced on April 29 this year, is Alibaba’s latest large language model (LLM).Its largest variant, Qwen-3-235B, outperformed models such as OpenAI’s o1, o3-mini-medium, DeepSeek R1, and Grok 3-Thinking in benchmark tests.The smaller Qwen-3 30B-A3B model demonstrated benchmark performance surpassing Gemma3, Deepseek-v3, and GPT-4o.Trained on roughly 36 trillion tokens and supporting 119 languages, Qwen-3 leverages a hybrid thinking mode—carefully processing complex tasks for greater accuracy, and rapidly responding to simpler queries, significantly boosting efficiency. Expanding Cloud InfrastructureChina's cloud infrastructure services are dominated by Alibaba, Huawei, and Tencent, holding market shares of 33%, 18%, and 10%, respectively. Alibaba’s cloud-related revenues grew by 15% year-over-year, while Tencent faced stagnation due to GPU supply constraints and internal prioritization of AI chips. Alibaba is expanding its regional infrastructure, opening its third data center in Malaysia in early July, with plans to launch a second data center in the Philippines by October—addressing growing AI demand across Southeast Asia. Wrapping UpThe resumed exports of Nvidia’s H20 chips to China present a pivotal momentum boost for Alibaba, which is strategically centering its growth around AI and cloud infrastructure. With Qwen-3 now integrated into Apple's ecosystem, Alibaba is positioned to gain significant ground in China's AI leadership race. In an environment marked by technological regulation and geopolitical tension, Alibaba’s dual focus on strong financial results and global partnerships makes it a company to watch closely.[Compliance Note]All posts by Sellsmart are for informational purposes only. Final investment decisions should be made with careful judgment and at the investor’s own risk.The content of this post may be inaccurate, and any profits or losses resulting from trades are solely the responsibility of the investor.Core16 may hold positions in the stocks mentioned in this post and may buy or sell them at any time.
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Neutral
Neutral
BABA
Alibaba Group Holding ADR Representing 8
user
박재훈투영인
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5 months ago
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3 Photos That Help Explain the Frenzy Over Alibaba's IPO(2014년 9월 18일)
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BABA
Alibaba Group Holding ADR Representing 8
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user
박재훈투영인
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5 months ago
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3 Photos That Help Explain the Frenzy Over Alibaba's IPO(2014년 9월 18일)
If you live in China, or perhaps Russia, or are part of the Chinese diaspora, you already know how big a deal Alibaba Group is. And if you're one of the investors clamoring for a piece — any piece — of the giant e-commerce company, there's no doubt you're sold on its prospects.For others, though, who are still trying to wrap their brains around how a Chinese company founded in an apartment — not a Silicon Valley garage — could pull off the world's largest initial public offering, here's some visual help.No, that's not the control room at NORAD. It's a photo from last year of Alibaba's employees watching a live broadcast of transactions on Singles' Day, which celebrates those without a significant other. The day in November has become a huge occasion for e-commerce companies to deluge the Internet with steep discounts.Last year, Alibaba's two main platforms — Taobao Marketplace and Tmall — had sales of about $5.8 billion during the 24-hour period. For some context, sales on Cyber Monday, the busiest online shopping day in the U.S., hit a record of about $2 billion in 2013.Of course, what would you expect, given that the number of Internet users in China — 632 million, according to government data — is about double the total population of the U.S. Meanwhile, a McKinsey & Co. report sees China's e-tailing market growing to as much as $395 billion next year, which is triple the amount in 2011."Because Chinese retail is coming of age in the midst of the digital revolution, its evolution may follow a different — and faster — trajectory than what has occurred in other countries," the report said.Singles' Day also demonstrated Alibaba's logistical prowess: The company said it processed 254 million orders within 24 hours and handled 156 million packages, compared with its daily average of almost 17 million, according to a U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission filing.Pictured here are workers packaging yarn at an office in Qinghe county, about 230 miles from Beijing. The significance?It's rural regions like this that are playing a big role in the growth of Alibaba's platforms. About 4.5 million sellers, or slightly more than half of those hawking their goods on the company's Chinese retail marketplaces, were located outside of China's major cities (also known as tier 1 and 2 cities), according to Alibaba's filing. About 173 million buyers, or 62 percent of those actively making purchases, also reside outside of the big cities. And as more rural residents go digital thanks to lower-priced smartphones from companies such as Xiaomi, Alibaba stands to benefit.As Bloomberg News reporter Lulu Yilun Chen wrote last year, Alibaba has helped people such as Liu Yuguo rake in more than $1.6 million in just two years by selling yarn on Taobao. That enabled the former farmer with a seventh-grade education to buy a four-story office and a BMW X6 sports utility vehicle.In his letter to investors, Alibaba founder Jack Ma said the company's mission is "to make it easy to do business anywhere." And apparently, selling anything, whether that's an "advanced outdoor energy efficiency hot dog trailer" (pictured here, starting at $1,280), a life-size Vladimir Putin wax figure or cherries harvested in Utah.In its SEC filing, Alibaba said more than 170 tons of cherries grown by farmers in the U.S. were sold to Chinese consumers last year through Tmall, in partnership with the Agricultural Trade Office in Shanghai and the U.S. Department of Agriculture. In boasting about its logistical abilities, the company said the cherries were delivered from the tree to the table within 72 hours. Alibaba also cited Chilean blueberries, Alaskan king crab and lobsters from Canada as examples of overseas perishables it has made available to Chinese consumers.It's this dizzying array of products that helps Alibaba reach users outside of China. And with the company focused on brokering transactions into and out of the country, that promises to "enable a new age of border-hopping commerce that bypasses middlemen," Bloomberg Businessweek's Brad Stone wrote last month. Add to that the $21.8 billion Alibaba raised in its IPO, and you have a company capable of becoming the first truly global online marketplace.
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BABA
Alibaba Group Holding ADR Representing 8
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