Speculation Grows Over Fate of Chinese Tech
Billionaire Jack Ma
January 8, 2021
China’s Jack Ma — onetime schoolteacher,
billionaire co-founder and former chairman of
tech giant Alibaba and philanthropist — is
missing from the spotlight, and speculation
about his fate is mounting because when
high-profile Chinese figures disappear, arrests
and prosecutions often follow.
Unseen in public since October, analysts say Ma
may be lying low as Chinese authorities
investigate his sprawling business empire after
he made an incendiary speech days before the
highly anticipated stock market listing of
Alibaba’s financial affiliate, Ant Group.
The speech, delivered at the Shanghai Financial
Summit on October 24, blasted China’s financial
regulators as unreasonable and urged them to be
more innovative. He also likened the Basel
accords, the global banking regulatory system,
to an "old people's club."
That was Ma’s last public appearance.
On November 2, financial regulators of the
Chinese Communist Party (CCP) interviewed Ant
Group executives and Ma, who no longer holds
executive or board level positions at either of
the companies he co-founded but is the largest
individual shareholder of Alibaba with
approximately 5%, worth some $25 billion.
On November 3, authorities suspended the Ant
Group IPO. Scheduled simultaneously in Shanghai
and Hong Kong for November 5, it was expected to
generate $37 billion, which would have made it
the world’s biggest IPO. At the time, The Wall
Street Journal reported that Xi Jinping,
president of the People's Republic of China and
the CCP chief, had personally ordered the Ant
Group IPO blocked after hearing Ma’s speech.
Later in November, Ma failed to appear to judge
the finale of a game show he created, according
to the Financial Times. He was replaced as a
judge of the second season of Africa’s Business
Heroes, a contest for entrepreneurs developed by
Ma’s foundation, even though he had tweeted he
"couldn't wait to meet the contestants."
On December 14, Beijing fined Alibaba
Investment Limited, which is owned by Alibaba,
500,000 RMB, or $77,200, for violating antitrust
laws, according to Reuters.
On December 24, China’s State Administration for
Market Regulation (NIM) opened an investigation
into Alibaba for possible monopolistic
practices, and Alibaba stock lost more than $110
billion in market value that day.
A week later, the agency fined Alibaba's Tmall,
an online business-to-consumer website, for
antitrust violations.
On January 4, Bloomberg News quoted people
familiar with the matter as saying that in early
December Ma had been advised by Chinese
authorities not to leave China. Also this week,
an Alibaba spokesperson told CBS News that "no
further information can be shared for now” about
Ma’s whereabouts.
While some believe that Ma has left China, Ge
Bidong, an economist based in Los Angeles and a
current affairs commentator, told VOA that this
is impossible. "No matter how powerful and rich
he is, he wouldn’t be able to escape from
China,” said Ge, who told VOA he was a political
prisoner in China for seven years before
arriving in the U.S. in 2018. “If he could
leave, there is only one possibility — that is,
the Chinese Communist Party wanted him to
leave."
The German government-funded news outlet
Deutsche Welle quoted analysts as saying that
this episode represents just the beginning of
Beijing's efforts to strengthen its control over
China's increasingly powerful tech giants.
Gene Chang, retired professor of economics at
the University of Toledo in Ohio, told VOA what
is happening to Jack Ma is not just about
Alibaba's monopoly power.
“Alibaba does seem to have a monopoly … but it
can be solved through government regulation,”
said Chang. “But if the government politicizes
this regulation, fearing that private companies
pose a challenge to communist rule, the economy
will become a victim."
Ge, who also writes for the Epoch Times, told
VOA that Alibaba's online shopping model is not
only good for consumers, but also “stimulated a
significant increase in physical production and
led to an expansion of logistics."
Chang believes that market imbalances such as
monopolies are natural consequences of economic
development, and that it is the responsibility
of government to use regulation to achieve the
appropriate social balance.
“The government should come forward to digest or
reduce the negative impact the transformation
generates and balance social welfare," he said.
Ge
said there is only one future for Alibaba: It
will be transformed into whatever ownership the
CCP wants, and “Jack Ma and people like him will
be eliminated.”
And Ge’s certainty is part of what fuels the
speculation. In June 2017, Wu Xiaohui, the
onetime chairman of the vast and well-connected
Anbang Insurance Group, disappeared from view
only to resurface at trial in March 2018. He was
found guilty of financial fraud and abuse of
power and sentenced to 18 years.
In early 2020, Ren Zhiqiang, former chairman of
the state-owned property developer Huayuan Real
Estate Group, went missing after criticizing the
government’s mishandling of the coronavirus
outbreak.
In September, Ren, who once referred to Xi
Jinping as a “clown,” was found guilty of
corruption, having reportedly received an
illicit gain of nearly $7.4 million, taken
$184,500 in bribes and embezzled $8.9 million in
public funds between 2003 and 2017.