Beijing’s efforts to curb foreign technology at home. Chinese government controls have limited foreign competition and disrupted many online services, including Google’s and Amazon Web Services’, according to censorship watchdogs. This week, US President Barack Obama sharply criticized Chinese regulations that subject overseas companies to arduous measures regarding data management.
A more immediate concern may be how Alibaba intends to vie with the likes of Amazon, Microsoft and Google, which are slashing prices on cloud services to try and sustain double-digit growth. They’re battling over a public cloud services market that could grow into an $100 billion industry by 2017, according to researcher IDC. US customers are not expected to be bothered by the service’s Chinese ownership if pricing is competitive.
Alibaba has big plans for Aliyun, which now accounts for about 1 percent of its revenue but supports its core e-commerce operation and will also play a pivotal role in the long run. Alibaba sees cloud computing as key to its plans to aggregate and analyze the vast quantities of data it collects, including on consumer behavior.
The company also needs to find ways to sustain so-far stunning growth.
Shares in the company fell to their lowest levels since their debut on Tuesday, after rival JD.com’s better-than-expected quarterly results revived concerns that Alibaba’s expansion is slowing.
Cloud computing and infrastructure was the company’s fastest-growing business segment in the December quarter, increasing sales 85 percent to $58 million.
Alibaba now derives the vast majority of its revenue from China.
In recent months it has made headway in emerging markets from Russia to Brazil, but the company has taken a cautious, calculated approach to the US market.
The northern California data node would serve internal Alibaba businesses, like AliExpress, its online B2C platform for buyers outside of China, as well as external public cloud clients, Yu said. He declined to disclose details about potential clients. But cash-strapped startups generally rely heavily on cloud service providers to power their services.
Alibaba has invested in several US firms including messaging app Tango, online retailers 11Main.com, Fanatics.com and Shoprunner, but it’s unclear if they would avail themselves of Aliyun’s services.
Ahead of Wednesday’s launch, Aliyun ran an invitation-only trial period for customers in China with international expansion plans, he said.
The company began selling US cloud services on Tuesday. “Gradually we will start to attract international customers,” Yu said.
“There are actually lots of US customers, US enterprises who look forward to setting up lots of data centers in China to serve their Chinese-based customers.”