(Bloomberg) -- Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. forecast 2022 revenue that beat estimates, signaling it’s moving past a bruising antitrust investigation that dragged it into the red for the first time in nine years.

Jack Ma’s flagship e-commerce firm forecast revenue for the year ending March 2022 will rise at least 30% to more than 930 billion yuan ($144 billion), beating the 923.5 billion average seen by analysts. That’s a deceleration from the previous year’s 41%. Sales for the three moths ended March was a better-than-expected 187.4 billion yuan, but it swung to a 5.5 billion yuan net loss -- its first since 2012 -- after the company swallowed a $2.8 billion fine for monopolistic behavior imposed by Beijing.

Executives have sought to put behind them a crackdown on Ma’s internet empire that’s shaved $260 billion off the Chinese internet behemoth’s market value. The $2.8 billion fine marked the conclusion of a four-month probe, but the threat of future action will likely cast a shadow over Alibaba’s business for some time.

Following the fine, Alibaba joined 33 other tech firms in pledging to abide by monopoly laws and eradicate abuses like forced exclusivity agreements. The government has also pushed for greater control over the invaluable online data amassed by its internet giants that have enabled their meteoric expansion over the past decade. Antitrust watchdogs are screening its previous investments and could force a divestment if deemed in violation of regulations.