The Oklahoman

Chinese tycoon returns

Jack Ma ends silence with online video

- By Joe McDonald

BEIJING—China' s highest-profile entreprene­ur, Jack Ma, appeared Wednesday in an online video, ending a 21/ 2-month absence from public view that prompted speculatio­n about the future of the e-commerce billionair­e and his Alibaba Group.

In the 50-second video, Ma congratula­ted teachers supported by his foundation and made no mention of his disappeara­nce or official efforts to tighten control over Alibaba and other internet companies over the past six months. The video appeared on Chinese business news and other websites.

The normally voluble Ma disappeare­d from public view after he irked regulators by criticiz - ing them in an Oct. 24 speech at a Shanghai conference. Days later, regulators suspended the planned multi billiondol­lar stock market debut of Ant Group, a financial platform that grew out of Alibaba's payments service, Alipay.

That prompted speculatio­n online about whether t he 5 6- yearold Ma, China's biggest global business celebrity and a symbol of its tech boom, had been detained or might face legal trouble. Alibaba and the government haven't responded to questions about him.

The Jack Ma Foundation said in a statement Wednesday :“Jack Ma participat­ed in the online ceremony of the annual Rural Teacher Initiative event on January 20.” The foundation and Alibaba didn't respond to questions about Ma's status and when his next public event might be.

President Xi Jinping's government says antimonopo­ly enforcemen­t against internet companies will be a priority this year. Alibaba and other companies have been fined for violating antimonopo­ly rules. Some social media services have been reprimande­d for lapses in en forcing censorship.

In his October speech, Ma complained regulators had an antique “pawnshop mentality” and were hampering innovation, according to Chinese media. He appealed to them to make it easier for entreprene­urs and young people to borrow.

That clashed with the ruling party' s mar athon campaign to reduce surging debt in China's financial system that prompted fears about a possible bank crisis and led rating agencies to cut Beijing's credit rating for government borrowing.

Somepe op lesugge st ed the ruling Communist Party was making an example of Ma to show entreprene­urs couldn't defy regulators. But finance experts said Xi' s government was uneasy about Alibaba's dominance in retailing and Ant's potential financial risks.

Anti-monopoly regulators warned executives Alibaba and five other tech giants in December not to use their dominance to block new competitor­s from entering their markets. The central bank and other regulators have ordered Ant to overhaul its business before i ts market debut can go ahead.

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