Business World

Spotlight on Alibaba CEO Zhang as Jack Ma begins retirement

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BEIJING/SHANGHAI — Unlike his charismati­c boss, Jack Ma, Alibaba Chief Executive Officer (CEO) Daniel Zhang isn’t usually one to grab the limelight, let alone make kung fu movies with superstars or dance in public.

Little is known outside the company about Zhang, a softspoken accountant who goes under the epithet “Xiaoyaozi” at work — the name of a character from a Chinese martial arts novel literally meaning the “free and unfettered one.”

But he will have to step out from the shadows after Ma said he would leave his role as chairman in September 2019, handing Mr. Zhang the reins of his $420-billion tech giant.

“We don’t know much about (Zhang) even though he’s been CEO for a while, because he’s by nature a very low-key person, low profile. He’s happy to not be in the limelight,” said Duncan Clark, managing director at Beijing tech advisory BDA and author of “Alibaba: The House that Jack Built.”

The handover of power, the first such transition for any of China’s major tech firms, will see Mr. Zhang, 46, elevated to the top of a sprawling empire that spans e-commerce, payments, fastfood delivery and brick-and-mortar retail.

Mr. Zhang, who leads Alibaba’s investor calls with polish stemming from his years at global auditors Arthur Andersen and Pricewater­houseCoope­rs, has been CEO since 2015.

His fingerprin­ts are on some of the company’s most successful moves: he was a key architect of Alibaba’s “Singles Day,” the Nov. 11 event that has become the world’s largest online shopping festival.

The company has added around $200 billion to its market value since he became CEO, and has now posted nine straight quarters of revenue growth above 50% while investing in food delivery and offline retail, and pushing into Southeast Asia.

Crucially, Mr. Zhang oversaw the growth of retail platform Tmall, which has grown to be one of the company’s most significan­t revenue drivers, squaring off against major Chinese e-commerce rival JD.com, Inc.

But he also inherits some challenges. Despite soaring sales, Alibaba’s profit margins have been squeezed by rising competitio­n and heavy investment to fend off rivals. The company’s shares are down more than 10% this year after peaking in June.

A global trade war is also hampering Alibaba’s ambitions for internatio­nal expansion, including into the United States.

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Mr. Zhang, who joined Alibaba in 2007, sees Alibaba as an integrated ecosystem that lures consumers with movies, live-streamed sports, fastfood deliveries and news.

“Alibaba today is more like all-in-one,” he told investors and analysts on a call discussing the company’s quarterly earnings in August.

Mr. Zhang, who is from Shanghai, said in an interview with local business publicatio­n Yicai last year that he returned to the city once a week from Alibaba’s Hangzhou headquarte­rs to recharge and spend time with his wife.

He added that he had not bought a house in Hangzhou because he didn’t have time. To relax, he enjoys watching soccer and basketball.

Mr. Zhang — like Mr. Ma — has worked hard to promote the company since its 2014 listing, making appearance­s at the World Economic Forum in Davos and other global events.

But he doesn’t have the same star power that founders in China’s large tech companies hold, including Jack Ma, Baidu, Inc.’s Robin Li and Tencent Holdings Ltd.’s Pony Ma.

Those three frequently headline tech conference­s and even government events together. Mr. Ma even did a Michael Jacksonthe­med dance routine at an Alibaba anniversar­y event last year, complete with a costume.

Mr. Zhang and his team, although working under the radar, “are ready” to take over, Mr. Ma said in a letter to staff and shareholde­rs.

Mr. Ma described Mr. Zhang as having “superb talent, business acumen and determined leadership.”

“His analytical mind is unparallel­ed, he holds dear our mission and vision, he embraces responsibi­lity with passion, and he has the guts to innovate and test creative business models,” Mr. Ma wrote. —

 ?? AFP ?? THIS FILE PICTURE taken on Nov. 12, 2017 shows Alibaba CEO Daniel Zhang speaking shortly after the end of the 11.11, or Singles Day shopping festival, at a gala event in Shanghai.
AFP THIS FILE PICTURE taken on Nov. 12, 2017 shows Alibaba CEO Daniel Zhang speaking shortly after the end of the 11.11, or Singles Day shopping festival, at a gala event in Shanghai.

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