
Alibaba Group (NYSE:BABA) executives emphasized accelerated momentum in cloud and artificial intelligence, alongside continued heavy investment in its fast-growing “Quick Commerce” business, during the company’s December quarter 2025 results conference call. Management framed the quarter as part of a broader strategic push around two priorities: AI + Cloud and AI + Consumption.
AI strategy: “agent era” and a $100 billion external revenue goal
CEO Eddie Wu said Alibaba is entering “a new phase of entrepreneurial reinvention and critical investment oriented toward the future,” arguing that the rise of AI agents will expand the addressable market for cloud and AI infrastructure providers by several multiples. Wu said token consumption is rising across industries as AI capabilities are embedded into mainstream work environments, and he suggested that enterprise spending could expand beyond traditional IT budgets as AI becomes tied to operational workflows.
Cloud growth accelerates; AI products continue triple-digit run
In prepared remarks, Wu said Cloud Intelligence Group revenue growth accelerated to 36%, and that external customer revenue grew 35% in the quarter. He added that AI-related product revenue delivered triple-digit year-over-year growth for the 10th consecutive quarter.
CFO Toby Xu echoed those points, noting external customer growth of 35% versus 29% in the prior quarter. Xu said AI-related products continue to lead the momentum and their share of external cloud revenue increased. He reported Cloud Intelligence Group adjusted EBITDA margin was “relatively stable” at 9%, while the company continues to invest in customer growth and technology innovation.
Wu also cited operational indicators, including 6x growth in token consumption on the Model Studio platform over the past three months, and said Alibaba expects MaaS to become Cloud Intelligence Group’s largest revenue product. He further noted Alibaba Cloud’s cumulative external revenue through February of fiscal year 2026 surpassed RMB 100 billion.
Token Hub reorganization and Qwen/Wukong application push
To support its AI strategy, Wu said Alibaba created a new business group called Alibaba Token Hub (ATH), which includes Tongyi Lab, the MaaS business line, the Qwen business unit, the Wukong business unit, and an AI innovation business unit. In response to a question on the organizational rationale, management said the “agent-driven era” requires tighter integration between models and applications, with more data coming from customer usage scenarios.
Wu said Alibaba launched its latest-generation large model, Qwen3.5-Plus, during Chinese New Year and highlighted improvements in reasoning, coding, and agentic capabilities, as well as inference efficiency gains from architectural innovation. He said Alibaba plans to release next-generation models optimized for coding and agentic use cases.
On the consumer side, Wu said Qwen’s consumer-facing monthly active users have surpassed 300 million, and that Alibaba has integrated the Qwen app with parts of its ecosystem including Taobao instant commerce, Alipay, Fliggy, Damai, and Amap. On the enterprise side, he said Alibaba recently launched Wukong, described as an enterprise AI agent platform designed to upgrade workflows while remaining compatible with data permissions and management processes.
Xu added that Qwen has become one of the most widely adopted open-source model families globally, surpassing 1 billion cumulative downloads on Hugging Face by the end of January, and said the company plans to continue investing substantially in Qwen models and the Qwen app, including campaign-related spending.
Quick Commerce scales up, but investments pressure profitability
On the consumption side, Wu said Quick Commerce continued to expand in scale with ongoing improvement in unit economics and contributed to synergies with e-commerce that helped drive double-digit year-over-year growth in Taobao app monthly active consumers.
Xu provided additional detail, reporting that revenue from the China E-commerce group was RMB 159.3 billion, up 6%, while customer management revenue (CMR) increased 1%. He said the slowdown in revenue growth reflected weaker transaction activity and the phasing out of the impact from software service fee implementation.
Quick Commerce revenue rose 56% to RMB 20.8 billion. Xu said the company focused on scaling the business while improving user experience (UE) and average order value (AOV) sequentially during the quarter. However, Alibaba China E-commerce Group adjusted EBITDA declined 43% to RMB 34.6 billion, which management attributed primarily to investments in Quick Commerce, user experience, and technology. Xu said adjusted EBITDA may continue to fluctuate due to intense competition and continued investment.
In Q&A, management said Quick Commerce unit economics improved through fulfillment and logistics efficiency gains, better monetization, and order mix optimization, and it expects further improvement over coming quarters. The company also reiterated a target of over RMB 1 trillion in Quick Commerce GMV by FY 2028, said it expects positive cash flow once that scale is reached, and stated an expectation that the Quick Commerce business will be profitable in FY 2029.
Management also discussed ecosystem effects, saying Quick Commerce helped drive growth in annual active consumers (AACs) and category momentum, including food, fresh produce, and healthcare, and contributed to accelerated growth at Freshippo and Tmall Supermarket.
Consolidated financials, cash flow, and T-Head chip updates
On a consolidated basis, Xu reported total revenue of RMB 284.8 billion. Excluding Sun Art and Intime, Alibaba said revenue on a like-for-like basis would have grown 9%. Total adjusted EBITDA decreased 57%, which Xu attributed primarily to strategic investments in consumption-related innovation initiatives, including Quick Commerce, partly offset by improved cloud operating results and operating efficiencies across other businesses.
Alibaba reported GAAP net income of RMB 15.6 billion, down 66%. Operating cash flow was an inflow of RMB 36 billion, and free cash flow was RMB 11.3 billion, down RMB 27.7 billion year over year. Xu said the company is reinvesting cash flow to pursue leadership in AI and Quick Commerce. As of December 31, 2025, Alibaba held $42.5 billion in net cash, and said that excluding debt with maturities beyond five years, its net position is above $60 billion.
Wu also provided updates on T-Head, Alibaba’s chip unit. He said T-Head’s proprietary GPU chips have achieved scaled mass production, and as of February 2026 the unit had shipped 470,000 AI chips cumulatively. He said more than 60% of those chips serve external customers, and that T-Head supports AI workloads for more than 400 enterprise customers across industries. In response to a question about a potential spin-off, management said it does not rule out an IPO in the future but has no definitive timeline. The company also stated that T-Head’s annual revenue has reached the RMB 10 billion level and that production capacity is expected to expand through 2026 and 2027.
Looking ahead, management said it sees improving consumer sentiment entering the March quarter, and indicated that physical goods GMV and CMR trends had “significantly recovered” from the December quarter, with e-commerce EBITDA expected to improve accordingly.
About Alibaba Group (NYSE:BABA)
Alibaba Group Holding Limited is a Chinese multinational conglomerate founded in 1999 in Hangzhou, China, by Jack Ma and a group of co‑founders. The company built its business around internet-based commerce and related services and has grown into one of the largest e-commerce and technology companies in the world. Alibaba completed a high‑profile initial public offering on the New York Stock Exchange in 2014.
The company operates a portfolio of online marketplaces and platforms serving different customer segments: Alibaba.com for global and domestic B2B trade, Taobao for consumer-to-consumer shopping, and Tmall for brand and retailer storefronts targeted at Chinese consumers.
