The Star Malaysia - StarBiz

Alibaba’s rise creates 10 billionair­es besides Jack Ma

- By VENUS FENG

HONG KONG: Jack Ma, who launched China’s largest e-commerce company two decades ago and rode it to a US$47.6bil fortune, turns out to have created billions of dollars of wealth for at least 10 others – a total of almost US$100bil.

By investing directly in or partnering with companies that provide services for his online buying platforms – from payment systems to delivery companies – Ma and his Alibaba Group Holding Ltd have minted a network of people whose combined fortunes total more than US$52bil, according to the Bloomberg Billionair­es Index. With Ma’s wealth included, the collective net worth is larger than the economies of 136 countries.

“Jack is a long-term visionary,” said Duncan Clark, author of the book Alibaba: The House That Jack Ma Built and an early adviser to the company. The network of companies all feeding Alibaba at the centre “is something Jack Ma envisioned and planned from a long time ago.”

The fortunes have emerged from Alibaba’s supporting industries – e-payments and insurance, delivery companies and complement­ary retailers such as supermarke­ts.

At least two billionair­es have emerged this year from the fintech world supporting Alibaba. One of them is Ou Yafei, of ZhongAn Online P&C Insurance Co, which offers customers shipping return insurance through a click of a button for purchases on Alibaba’s Taobao online mall. The company, which counts Alibaba’s online payments business, Ant Financial, as its largest shareholde­r, had an initial public offering in Hong Kong in September. Min Luo from Qudian Inc, which provides credit loans to online shoppers in partnershi­p with Ant Financial, had an IPO in the US in October.

Parcel delivery has also created six billionair­es. Wang Wei, who started China’s largest parcel delivery company by revenue, SF Express, added more than US$15.4bil to his net worth this year after his SF Holdings Co became publicly traded on the Shenzhen Stock Exchange.

The company has primarily made its money shipping Alibaba’s goods, as have the delivery companies of ZTO Express Cayman Inc, STO Express, Yunda Holding Co – and YTO Express Group Co, which has an 11% ownership stake from Alibaba. The companies also cooperate in a logistics network called Cainiao Smart Logistics Network Ltd, which is majority owned by Alibaba.

“Alibaba’s e-commerce business is a more open system, connecting different parties from the supply chains,” said John Wu, Alibaba’s former group chief technology officer and co-founder of Singaporeb­ased venture capital firm and hedge fund FengHe Fund Management.

He compared Alibaba with Tencent Holdings Ltd, China’s biggest operator of online games, which along with Alibaba and Baidu Inc dominate China’s tech industry. Tencent “relies on a gaming business that follows a closed production circle of engineers’ design and developmen­t”, Wu said.

Alibaba co-founder and vice-chairman, Joseph Tsai, is the second-richest person to come from the Hangzhou-based company, with a net worth of US$11.5bil, according to the Bloomberg index. He recently agreed to buy a stake in the Brooklyn Nets after earlier buying a lacrosse team in California.

Ant Financial

In addition to the 10 billionair­es, Ant Financial created more than a dozen, based on Bloomberg reporting from 2015, when Ant was valued at US$50bil. The company’s shareholde­r structure has changed since then and ownership details aren’t clear and may not be until its planned initial public offering – meaning that it’s unknown how many people associated with Ant Financial are billionair­es. Alibaba has the right to acquire as much as 33% of Ant, which was valued at US$60bil in its last funding round, subject to regulatory approval.

Ma started Alibaba in 1999 at his home in Hangzhou, creating the “Alibaba Partnershi­p”. According to the company’s 2014 prospectus, it includes five executives from Ant Financial, and one from delivery platform China Smart Logistics. The members of the partnershi­p control 350 million shares that, once fully vested, are valued at US$65.2bil today. Ma and Tsai have stakes valued at US$38.9bil.

A spokesman for Alibaba and Ant Financial declined to comment on the wealth creation. Representa­tives of YTO, STO, Yunda, SF Express, ZhongAn and Qudian declined to discuss the wealth of their founders or primary shareholde­rs. An external investor relations representa­tive of ZTO, Christian Arnell, said, “Neither company would be able to grow at the rapid rates that they do had the other not exist.”

“The company often makes sure that management of their affiliates and partners have proper alignment of incentive to have the best chance of mutual success,” Rob Sanderson, managing director at MKM Partners LLC, in Stamford, Connecticu­t, said by email. “The scale of the ecosystem often makes successful ventures very large companies. This can sometimes make individual­s involved very wealthy.”

Mostly because of Alibaba’s Tmall and Taobao shopping sites, China has evolved into the world’s largest e-commerce market – putting the company in a race with Amazon. com Inc in market value. China’s Singles’ Day, promoted as a day of sales every year on Nov. 11, last year beat Amazon’s single-day tally on both “Black Friday” and “Cyber Monday.” This year, Singles’ Day sales were almost 40% higher than last year, exceeding US$25bil. “Both Amazon and Alibaba are transformi­ng commerce and media, retail and beyond, but Jack Ma has a more instinctiv­e feel for business driven by his experience on the street as a merchant,” said Clark, the former Alibaba adviser. “Jeff Bezos went to Princeton, worked on Wall Street, identified books as a sector based on detailed analysis. Jack Ma is more driven by gut feel, not analytics.”

China’s online shoppers spent an average of 11,404 yuan (US$1,718) each last year, a number forecast to grow 17% by 2019, according to a report from iResearch consultanc­y. The online retail market’s size is projected to double to US$1.7 trillion by 2020, according to a February report from Goldman Sachs Group Inc.

The boom is due to what’s known as consumptio­n upgrade, where China’s consumers continue to improve the quality of products they buy and their living standards, due to rising disposable incomes. They’ve risen 30% in the 2013-2016 period.

Meanwhile, Ma has said he hopes to continue driving innovation – a goal that will surely continue to carry along others.

“I don’t want to make our company a machine of making money,” Jack Ma said in a panel discussion in October, according to a video posted by the Philippine­s’ De La Salle University, where Ma was presented an honorary degree. “We should be the engine of the innovation of the world for this century.”

 ??  ?? High net worth: Tsai has a net worth of US$11.5bil — Bloomberg
High net worth: Tsai has a net worth of US$11.5bil — Bloomberg

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia