Apple Magazine

ALIBABA FINED $2.8 BILLION ON COMPETITIO­N CHARGE IN CHINA

-

Alibaba Group, the world’s biggest e-commerce company, was fined 18.3 billion yuan ($2.8 billion) by Chinese regulators for anticompet­itive tactics, as the ruling Communist Party tightens control over fast-growing tech industries.

Party leaders worry about the dominance of China’s biggest internet companies, which are expanding into finance, health services and other sensitive areas. The party says anti

monopoly enforcemen­t, especially in tech, is a priority this year.

Alibaba was fined for “abusing its dominant position” to limit competitio­n by retailers that use its platforms and hindering “free circulatio­n” of goods, the State Administra­tion for Market Regulation announced. It said the fine was equal to 4% of its total 2019 sales of 455.712 billion yuan ($69.5 billion).

“Alibaba accepts the penalty with sincerity and will ensure its compliance with determinat­ion,” the company said in a statement. It promised to “operate in accordance with the law with utmost diligence.”

The move is a new setback for Alibaba and its billionair­e founder, Jack Ma, following a November decision by regulators to suspend the stock market debut of Ant Group, a finance platform spun off from the e-commerce giant. It would have been the world’s biggest initial public stock offering last year.

Ma, one of China’s richest and most prominent entreprene­urs, disappeare­d temporaril­y from public view after criticizin­g regulators in a November speech. That was followed days later by the Ant Group suspension, though finance specialist­s said regulators already had been worried Ant lacked adequate financial risk controls.

Alibaba, launched in 1999, operates retail, business-to-business and consumer-toconsumer platforms. It has expanded at a breakneck pace into financial services, film production and other fields.

The government issued anti-monopoly guidelines in February aimed at preventing

anti-competitiv­e practices such as exclusive agreements with merchants and use of subsidies to squeeze out competitor­s.

The next month, 12 companies including Tencent Holdings, which operates games and the popular WeChat messaging service, were fined 500,000 ($77,000) each on charges of failing to disclose previous acquisitio­ns and other deals.

Regulators said in December they were looking into possibly anti-competitiv­e tactics by Alibaba including a policy dubbed “choose one of two,” which requires business partners to avoid dealing with its competitor­s.

Also in December, regulators announced executives of Alibaba, its main competitor, JD.com, and four other internet companies were summoned to a meeting and warned not to use their market dominance to keep out new competitor­s.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States