Hong Kon: Alibaba Group Holding Ltd, China’s biggest e-commerce company that held its initial public offering last year, bought $56.2 million (Dh206.4 million) of stock in US online retailer Zulily Inc. this week, according to a regulatory filing.

The purchases brought Alibaba’s holdings of Seattle-based Zulily to 11.5 million shares, or a 9.3 per cent stake, according to regulatory filings and data compiled by Bloomberg. Alibaba’s Zulily holdings were worth $152.9 million at Friday’s closing price of $13.30.

Alibaba Chairman Jack Ma has set a goal of getting 50 per cent of sales from outside China as the nation’s economy is projected to grow at its slowest pace since 1990. Online commerce from China accounted for 80 per cent of revenue in the March quarter, while international e-commerce sales were just 9 per cent of the company’s total, Alibaba said.

“Alibaba continues to focus on making investments in forward-thinking, innovative entrepreneurs that are developing leading products and technologies,” Jennifer Kuperman, vice president of international corporate affairs at Alibaba, said in an email. “The Zulily team has a compelling vision for the future that is consistent with our investment philosophy.”

Alibaba has announced at least $2.4 billion in investments in the past 12 months including a Chinese soccer team, a smartphone maker and a mobile application for hailing taxis. The company is trying to diversify while still tapping the more than 557 million Chinese who access the internet from their smartphones and tablets.

Slumping stock

Zulily, which sells clothing, home decor and related items, mostly to women, has seen its stock fall 82 per cent since its all-time closing high of $72.75 on February 27, 2014, after a November 2013 initial public offering. The stock dropped to a record low close of $10.82 on May 6 and then rebounded 23 per cent in the following two days as Alibaba added to its stake.

At the end of March, Zulily had 5 million customers who had made at least one purchase in the previous year, up 35 per cent from the previous year. More than half of all Zulily sales are on mobile devices.

Alibaba’s most recent Zulily share purchases were in five transactions from May 6 to May 8, at prices ranging from $10.75 to $12.26, according to the filing.

“We have great respect for the team at Alibaba and all that they have built,” Darrell Cavens, Zulily chief executive officer, said in an emailed statement.

Rising revenue

Alibaba announced a 45 per cent increase in revenue, according to a separate regulatory filing on May 7. The company also said Daniel Zhang will become its chief executive officer on May 10, replacing Jonathan Lu, who will remain on the board as vice-chairman.

Alibaba’s shares have gained 28 per cent after being sold at $68 apiece in a September IPO that raised a record $25 billion.

Amazon.com gets more than one-third of its e-commerce revenue internationally, and the company is trying to further expand its global reach with investments in India and China.

China and the US are the world’s largest e-commerce markets. Global e-commerce spending will reach $1.6 trillion this year, with China and the US combining for more than half of those sales, according to research firm EMarketer.

Alibaba’s Zulily stake was previously reported by the Wall Street Journal.

-With assistance from Lulu Yilun Chen in Hong Kong, Tim Culpan in Taipei and Suresh Seshadri in Bengaluru.

To contact the reporters on this story: Kristen Haunss in New York at khaunss@bloomberg.net; Spencer Soper in San Francisco at ssoper@bloomberg.net To contact the editors responsible for this story: Bernard Kohn at bkohn2@bloomberg.net Brendan Murray, Stephen West