The Independent

Alibaba fined £2.4bn by China over ‘market breach’

- RORY SULLIVAN

China has fined Jack Ma’s Alibaba Group £2.4bn after concluding that it had breached market competitio­n rules introduced in February.

The 18.3 billion yuan penalty comes as part of Beijing’s drive to curtail the dominance of some of its internet companies, which were, until recently, only lightly regulated.

The decision stems from a months-long investigat­ion into anti-competitio­n practices at Alibaba, the world’s largest ecommerce firm.

The country’s market regulator revealed its findings yesterday, saying that the company was guilty of “abusing its dominant position” by making merchants sell their wares exclusivel­y on its Tmall and Taobao platforms. The tech giant accepted the ruling, which docked it 4 per cent of its total earnings in 2019.

“Alibaba accepts the penalty with sincerity and will ensure its compliance with determinat­ion,” it said in a statement.

The company also said it would not make the same mistakes and would “operate in accordance with the law with utmost diligence”.

The announceme­nt is yet another setback for Mr Ma, after the regulator banned the tech billionair­e’s planned initial public offering (IPO) of his Ant Group last year.

Scheduled for November, its stock market debut in both Shanghai and Hong Kong was predicted to be the world’s largest ever IPO.

Ahead of the floating, Mr Ma disappeare­d from public after making a speech in which he criticised the Chinese financial system.

If the IPO had gone ahead, the Alibaba founder was anticipate­d to become the wealthiest man in China.

Mr Ma launched the company in 1999 and it has recently extended its reach by going into financial services, film production and other areas.

 ?? (AFP) ?? Jack Ma, the founder of the world’s largest ecommerce company
(AFP) Jack Ma, the founder of the world’s largest ecommerce company

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