According to sources cited by Bloomberg, Alibaba (BABA) has put forward a $1.5 billion acquisition proposal for Pupu, a regional grocery delivery operator headquartered in Fujian province.
Alibaba Group Holding Limited, BABA
This proposal significantly outpaces the approximately $600 million bid submitted by Sun Art Retail (HK: 6808), a former Alibaba portfolio company now controlled by private equity player DCP Capital.
BABA was priced at $115.38 on June 10, showing a 1.43% decline during trading hours.
With annual revenues exceeding 30 billion yuan — approximately $4.2 billion — Pupu maintains a 30-minute delivery infrastructure spanning multiple Chinese provinces.
This operational capacity represents a valuable strategic asset in China’s hyper-competitive instant commerce sector, where delivery speed and operational efficiency determine market leadership.
Should the transaction proceed, it would represent Alibaba’s latest effort to strengthen its position against Meituan (HK: 3690) and JD.com (HK: 9618) in the local services and online grocery segments.
Meituan previously reached an agreement to purchase Dingdong Fresh Holding in a transaction worth approximately $717 million earlier in 2025.
Alibaba’s substantially higher bid — exceeding double Meituan’s outlay — demonstrates the strategic priority the company places on this market segment.
Alibaba maintains a diversified business portfolio including Taobao, Tmall, Alibaba Cloud, AliExpress, Lazada, and the Cainiao logistics network. However, its core Chinese e-commerce operations face mounting competitive pressure from Pinduoduo and platforms supported by ByteDance.
Instant commerce represents a strategic battleground where Alibaba can compete for routine consumer purchases, and Pupu’s established infrastructure would provide immediate market access.
The company’s cloud and artificial intelligence division continues expanding at 34–36% annually, with its Qwen language model and T-Head semiconductor initiatives positioning it for future growth.
Yet the grocery delivery initiative addresses immediate competitive needs — maintaining consumer relationships before rivals establish dominant positions.
Wall Street consensus targets for BABA cluster around $190, suggesting approximately 40% appreciation potential from current price levels. One research firm has established a base-case target of $185, predicated on cloud segment margin expansion from approximately 9% to 12%.
The company maintains an active $19 billion share repurchase program extending through 2027, alongside its 33% ownership position in Ant Group.
As of June 10, Yahoo Finance data showed Alibaba trading at a trailing P/E ratio of 17.74 and forward P/E of 18.08.
The proposed Pupu acquisition remains unconfirmed as finalized. Bloomberg’s reporting relied on confidential sources, and Alibaba has not issued official confirmation.
Sun Art, the competing bidder, has not publicly addressed the Bloomberg disclosure.
Pupu’s 30-minute fulfillment infrastructure extends across numerous Chinese provinces, representing a distribution network that would require substantial time and capital investment to build independently.
Alibaba’s valuation — more than double Sun Art’s proposed price — underscores both the platform’s strategic significance and the fierce competition currently defining China’s grocery delivery landscape.
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