China’s Alibaba 2007 net more than quadruples
By Gareth Powell March 19th, 2008
Top Chinese e-commerce firm Alibaba.com full-year 2007 profit grew 340 percent, boosted by a buoyant Chinese economy, increasing Internet access in the country and healthy growth in the firm’s number of paying members. And the genius of Jack Ma.
Alibaba.com, an online business-to-business site connecting companies looking to import and export Chinese goods, was founded in 1999 as a bulletin board for businesses to post trade leads.
Last year, Alibaba had a 57.3% share of China’s RMB3.9 billion business-to-business market.
Alibaba, in which U.S. Internet company Yahoo is a key investor, reported a profit of RMB967.8 million ($136.7 million) for the year to the end of 2007, compared with RMB219.93 million a year earlier.
Our illustration shows Alibaba.com founder Jack Ma giving the thumbs-up at the Hong Kong stock exchange on a previous occasion. He is damn well entitled to. The fact that the share prices go up and down is due to the vagaries of the stock market, not the soundness of the business.
Source: Reuters

