Fiji Sun

Jack Ma Warns Alibaba, China to Prepare for 20-Year Trade War

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Alibaba co-founder Jack Ma cautioned China’s business and political leaders to prepare for the trade war with the US to last longer and have a bigger impact than most people think.

China’s richest man said the dispute could last 20 years and persist beyond the presidency of Donald Trump, as the world’s two strongest economic powers battle for global supremacy. China needs to strengthen its economy to deal with the conflict and shift trade relations from the US to regions like Southeast Asia and Africa, Mr Ma said during a speech at the company’s investor day conference in Hangzhou.

“Short term, business communitie­s in China, US, Europe will all be in trouble,” Mr Ma said, pacing a stage in an open white dress shirt and punctuatin­g his remarks with forceful jabs.

“This thing will last long. If you want a short-term solution, there is no solution.” His comments came just hours after China vowed to retaliate against US plans to levy tariffs on about US$200 billion (FJ$ 308,905bn) in Chinese goods.

Mr Ma said Alibaba would also be affected by the rising tensions, given its wholesale business allowed American merchants to source products from China.

But he also said the trauma would offer unpreceden­ted opportunit­ies for companies that could take advantage of them.

“We should not focus on this quarter or next quarter or next year’s profit. This is a huge opportunit­y,” he said.

“If Alibaba cannot sustain and grow, no company in China can grow. I’m 100 per cent confident in that.” Alibaba shares, which trade in the US, slipped on Tuesday and have declined about 9 per cent this year.

Mr Ma’s remarks carry particular weight because he is an icon of Chinese innovation and has been seen as an ambassador to the US. Last year, he met with Mr Trump and promised to create one million jobs in the US through 2021.

But Mr Ma, a week after he announced plans to hand over the chairman role to Chief Executive Officer Daniel Zhang, left no doubt on Tuesday about his support for his own country.

If the US insists on levying tariffs on Chinese goods, then China should shift its business to the rest of the world, he said.

“When problems come, learn how to hide, learn how to train,” he said.

“I believe Daniel and his team will have the wisdom to fight for the future.”

Mr Ma’s speech underscore­d the void he will be leaving when he steps down in a year’s time.

His soliloquy was accentuate­d by comments on everything from geopolitic­al gambits to the importance of self-awareness on individual limits.

He even took a jab at competitor JD.com Inc.’s founder Richard Liu - while rebutting the idea he was forced out of the company.

Mr Ma said he received many queries from acquaintan­ces, including questions on whether he was experienci­ng a “Minnesota” situation, a reference to current rape allegation­s that JD’s Liu is facing.

Mr Liu has denied any wrongdoing and no charges have been filed. Mr Ma said he was confident of leaving the company in the hands of Zhang as the CEO bolsters Alibaba’s ambitions in ecommerce, so-called new retail and entertainm­ent.

Those initiative­s will help sustain revenue growth for the financial year ending in March of 60 per cent, a figure that chief financial officer Maggie Wu first disclosed in May.

Bloomberg

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