Oman Daily Observer

Alibaba, planned Taiwan fund, won’t seek board seats at local firms

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TAIPEI: Alibaba Group Holding, which is awaiting regulatory approval for a $45 million fund it is participat­ing in, has promised the Taiwanese government it will not take board seats at local firms the fund invests in, a source with direct knowledge of the matter said.

The fund is being raised by China Developmen­t Financial Holding (CDF), one of the island’s biggest financial holding firms, and the Chinese e-commerce giant is planning to take a 29.99 per cent stake.

The deal has yet to be approved by Taiwan’s Investment Commission despite an applicatio­n three months ago, raising concern that the fund may be rejected amid a chill in political relations with China.

It follows a $300 million Taiwan Entreprene­ur Fund that Alibaba founder Jack Ma announced in 2015 but while the start-ups that the fund has invested in so far are based in Taiwan, they are not incorporat­ed in Taiwan.

Beijing cut off an official communicat­ions channel with Taiwan in June, after Taiwan’s President Tsai Ing-wen declined to commit to the “One China” principle that Taiwan is part of China.

In a sign of heightened tensions, Taiwan scrambled jets and navy ships on Wednesday as a group of Chinese warships led by China’s sole aircraft carrier sailed north through the Taiwan Strait.

Other business deals have been affected. In November, Taiwan’s ChipMOS Technologi­es said it scrapped a planned $373 million stake sale to China’s Tsinghua Unigroup due to uncertaint­y about Taiwanese regulatory clearance, the second deal in eight months involving Unigroup and a firm in the island to fall through.

The source, who declined to be identified due to the sensitivit­y of the subject, said Alibaba’s investment plans offered benefits to Taiwan startups. “Alibaba can offer Taiwan entreprene­urs assistance to enter markets not only in China but in Southeast Asia as well,” said the source.

The commission said that it was appropriat­e to take a more cautious approach to investment­s from China. “We welcome foreign investment­s, and Chinese investment­s in principle as well,” said Emile Chang, the commission’s executive secretary. — Reuters

 ?? — Reuters ?? An woman walks past a wall painted with logo of Alibaba (China) at its head office in Hangzhou.
— Reuters An woman walks past a wall painted with logo of Alibaba (China) at its head office in Hangzhou.

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