Chinese social network giant Weibo continues its strong comeback in the quarter ended on September 30th. The company, once touted as Chinaโ€™s Twitter, recorded $101.1 million net income from this period, growing 215% year-on-year. Total revenues were $320 million, out of which $276.8 had come from advertising and marketing, taking up 86% of its total revenues.

In the past few years, Alibabaโ€™s e-commerce marketplaces have been a major source of revenues for Weibo. When the Chinese e-commerce behemoth first purchased 18% stakes in Weibo back in April 2013, it promised to bring at least $294 million in revenues to the social network. The deal was widely regarded a win-win situation for the two, for the traffic Alibaba brings to Weibo would in turn lead back to sales on Alibabaโ€™s e-commerce. Alibaba did its job: From 2013 to 2015, Alibabaโ€™s e-commerce advertisers brought in over $300 million in advertising and marketing revenues.

Last September, Alibaba increased its stake in Weibo to 31.5% to become the second largest shareholder after Weiboโ€™s parent company Sina; meanwhile Weibo has gradually grown less reliant on Alibaba, whose revenue contribution dropped from 30% in 2015 to 8.8% in 2016. Taking over are small and medium-sized enterprises and key accounts, which accounted for 78.6% of Weiboโ€™s Q3 revenues.

Weiboโ€™s surge in growth from the last few quarters has impressed Wall Street. This is mainly achieved by pivoting from a elitist, urbanite focus (like Twitter does) to a lower-tier city strategy. The social network has seized this population by pre-loading its app into low-end smartphone partners, as well as deploying short video and live broadcasting featuresโ€”the two areas driving user engagement and advertising revenues. From 2015 to 2016, Weiboโ€™s monthly active users grew 66.2% to 312 million (in Chinese) and in August, its valuation hit $20 billion (in Chinese) for the first time.

On October 24th, Weibo announced to raise $700 million in convertible senior notes, part of which will be used for โ€œpotential acquisitions of complementary businessesโ€. These acquisitions are likely to be in content and media, given they are currently Weiboโ€™s strong revenue drivers.

Telling the uncommon China stories through tech. I can be reached at ritacyliao [at] gmail [dot] com.

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