Ottawa Citizen

Alibaba chairman leaves Chinese firm

One of successor’s major challenges will be finding new areas of growth, analysts say

- JOSH HORWITZ

SHANGHAI Alibaba Group chairman Jack Ma will step down from the Chinese firm on Tuesday, leaving his handpicked successor a daunting task of steering the US$460-billion juggernaut at a time when the market for its core e-commerce business has slowed sharply.

As Ma, who turns 55 on Tuesday, holds centrestag­e at his farewell party in the 80,000-capacity Hangzhou Olympic Sports Center stadium to the accompanim­ent of music and celebrity performanc­es, attendees will be hoping to get clues on how Alibaba will be run under his heir Daniel Zhang.

An accountant by trade, soft-spoken Alibaba CEO Zhang marks a stark contrast to Ma whose flamboyant style and charismati­c leadership made him the most recognized Chinese entreprene­ur since the former English teacher founded the company 20 years ago in a small shared apartment in Hangzhou city in eastern China.

“He has the logic and critical thinking skills of a super computer, a commitment to his vision, the courage to wholeheart­edly dare to take on innovative business models and industries of the future,” Ma said of Zhang in 2018 in a message announcing his appointmen­t.

One of Zhang ’s major challenges will be finding new areas of growth as China’s e-commerce sector matures, analysts said.

Last week, Alibaba announced investment­s of US$2.7 billion in luxury goods retail platform Kaola and a music streaming firm in moves that partly demonstrat­ed its flexibilit­y in adopting new strategies.

“If Alibaba wants to find new innovation­s or trends this is going to be more difficult than before,” said Liu Yiming, an analyst at the research division of 36kr, a Chinese tech publishing group. “For Daniel Zhang, this will be a big challenge.”

China’s online retail sales grew just 17.8 per cent in the first half of 2019, almost halving from the 32.4-per-cent growth of the prior year, according to the national statistics office. The resignatio­n plan announced by Ma last year was perceived as unusual as it is rare for a founder of such a big and transforma­tive tech firm to retire this early.

Under Ma’s leadership, Alibaba has grown to become Asia’s most valuable listed company, with a current market capitaliza­tion of US$460 billion. It employs over 100,000 people, and has expanded into financial services, cloud computing and artificial intelligen­ce.

(Zhang has) the courage to ... dare to take on ... industries of the future.

After his resignatio­n, Ma, China’s richest man with a net worth of US$38.4 billion, according to Forbes, is set to spend more time on philanthro­py and education.

Yet he will remain a member of Alibaba’s partnershi­p, a corporate governing group of 38 individual­s that is separate from the board of directors.

While the story of Ma’s success has become legend in China, he has also suffered some setbacks that Zhang would need to repair.

Ma struggled to expand Alibaba internatio­nally, with the failed US$1.2-billion acquisitio­n of remittance provider MoneyGram marking a key disappoint­ment.

Its Taobao marketplac­e has been accused by overseas luxury goods sellers of being a haven for counterfei­t products. It is on a U.S. list of “notorious markets” for goods that infringe on American intellectu­al property, a main source of friction in an escalating trade war between Beijing and Washington.

Ma also drew ire and sparked a nationwide debate about work culture in China earlier this year when he urged tech company employees to work nights and weekends.

 ?? DANIEL ACKER/BLOOMBERG ?? Alibaba founder Jack Ma has become a legend in China, but he has suffered setbacks, including a failed bid to expand Alibaba internatio­nally.
DANIEL ACKER/BLOOMBERG Alibaba founder Jack Ma has become a legend in China, but he has suffered setbacks, including a failed bid to expand Alibaba internatio­nally.

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