Alibaba's health shift prescribes market medicine

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[HONG KONG] Alibaba's new health priorities come at the right time. The e-commerce group is injecting more assets into its healthcare subsidiary, now worth a punchy US$25 billion. It's a timely bet that the coronavirus will accelerate reforms, like opening China's US$370 billion drug industry to Web retailers. Read more at The Business Times.

Alibaba's new health priorities come at the right time. The e-commerce group is injecting more assets into its healthcare subsidiary, now worth a punchy US$25 billion. It's a timely bet that the coronavirus will accelerate reforms, like opening China's US$370 billion drug industry to Web retailers.[HONG KONG] Alibaba's new health priorities come at the right time. The e-commerce group is injecting more assets into its healthcare subsidiary, now worth a punchy US$25 billion.

The Hong Kong-listed Alibaba Health Information Technology will issue US$1 billion worth of new shares to its parent in exchange for the latter's pharmaceutical business. The group's stake will rise to 59.5 per cent from 56.6 per cent as a result. The sale follows earlier transactions which saw the US$570 billion parent offload nutritional and healthcare operations to the subsidiary, as well as medical devices.

Operationally, little changes. Ali Health will manage drug sales on Alibaba's shopping sites. Citi analysts estimated in early February that the new business will bring in an additional US$18 million in revenue next year for the healthcare unit - less than a 1 per cent addition to its total. Even so, excited investors have added more than US$6 billion in market value to the loss-making Ali Health since the deal was announced a month ago, as the Covid-19 epidemic ravaged the People's Republic. Shares now fetch an eye-popping 10.5 times forward sales, on a par with online rival Ping An Healthcare and Technology, but far above most listed brick-and-mortar drugstore chains, Refinitiv data shows.

Even before the outbreak, Ali Health shares were rallying on policy changes, in particular the removal of a ban on online prescription-drug sales last year. That's a big deal: sales of prescription and other medicines are forecast to grow from US$370 billion this year to over US$500 billion by 2025, Citi analysts reckon. Digital sales could account for up to 15 per cent of the total by then.

 

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