Boston Herald

Alibaba fined $2.8B on competitio­n charge in China

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BEIJING — Alibaba Group, the world’s biggest e-commerce company, was fined 18.3 billion yuan ($2.8 billion) by Chinese regulators on Saturday for anticompet­itive tactics, as the ruling Communist Party tightens control over fastgrowin­g 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-to-consumer 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.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES FILE ?? OPENING THE WALLET: A woman jogs in front of Alibaba headquarte­rs in Hangzhou, southwest of Shanghai, China. Chinese regulators hit e-commerce giant Alibaba with a massive $2.8 billion fine over practices deemed to be an abuse of the company's dominant market position, state-run media reported on Saturday.
GETTY IMAGES FILE OPENING THE WALLET: A woman jogs in front of Alibaba headquarte­rs in Hangzhou, southwest of Shanghai, China. Chinese regulators hit e-commerce giant Alibaba with a massive $2.8 billion fine over practices deemed to be an abuse of the company's dominant market position, state-run media reported on Saturday.

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