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   Technology StocksAlibaba Group Holding Limited


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From: Glenn Petersen4/11/2023 4:57:38 AM
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Alibaba to roll out its rival to ChatGPT across all its products

PUBLISHED MON, APR 10 202310:01 PM EDT
UPDATED 5 HOURS AGO
Sheila Chiang
CNBC.com

KEY POINTS

-- Chinese tech giant Alibaba revealed its ChatGPT-style product Tongyi Qianwen at a Tuesday summit.

-- Tongyi Qianwen will possess Chinese and English language capabilities, the tech giant said at the 2023 Alibaba Cloud Summit.

-- “We are at a technological watershed moment driven by generative AI and cloud computing, and businesses across all sectors have started to embrace intelligence transformation to stay ahead of the game,” said Daniel Zhang, chairman and CEO of Alibaba Group and CEO of Alibaba Cloud Intelligence.

Alibaba Cloud, the cloud computing unit of Chinese tech giant Alibaba, announced Tuesday it will be rolling out its own ChatGPT-style product Tongyi Qianwen.

Tongyi Qianwen, which possess Chinese and English language capabilities, will initially be deployed on DingTalk, Alibaba’s workplace communication software, and Tmall Genie, a provider of smart home appliances, the company said in a release.

Hong Kong-listed shares of Alibaba gained traded more than 3% higher after the announcement but has since pared some gains. Shares of Baidu in Hong Kong were down 6%.

At the 2023 Alibaba Cloud Summit, the company said it will be rolling out the artificial intelligence-powered chatbot into all Alibaba products from enterprise communication to e-commerce in “the near future.” It did not reveal a timeline.

“We are at a technological watershed moment driven by generative AI and cloud computing, and businesses across all sectors have started to embrace intelligence transformation to stay ahead of the game,” said Daniel Zhang, chairman and CEO of Alibaba Group and CEO of Alibaba Cloud Intelligence, in a statement.

Alibaba first told CNBC it was working on a ChatGPT rival in February.

“The new AI model will be integrated across Alibaba’s various businesses to improve user experience in the near future. The company’s customers and developers will have access to the model to create customised AI features in a cost-effective way,” the company said.

Alibaba Cloud will offer its clients access to Tongyi Qianwen on the cloud and help them build customized large language models.

The chatbot will be fine-tuned with proprietary information and data from clients, reducing resources and costs for these companies. Alibaba Cloud’s enterprise customers in China will be able to access Tongyi Qianwen for beta testing.

“We hope to facilitate businesses from all industries with their intelligence transformation and, ultimately, help boost their business productivity, expand their expertise and capabilities while unlocking more exciting opportunities through innovations,” said Jingren Zhou, CTO of Alibaba Cloud Intelligence, in the release.

Developers in China can also apply for beta testing of Tongyi Qianwen to create their AI applications at scale, the company said.

Users can expect “more compelling” AI features such as image understanding and text-to-image to be added to the Tongyi Qianwen model soon.

Alibaba is the latest Chinese player after Baidu to reveal ChatGPT alternatives. Baidu revealed its own ChatGPT version, Ernie Bot, in March.

Chinese technology giants from Alibaba to Baidu to NetEase have announced their intentions to launch ChatGPT-style products.

Alibaba has maintained its position as the third leading public cloud infrastructure as a service (IaaS) provider globally since 2018, according to International Data Corporation.

The tech company also holds the positions of world’s third leading and Asia Pacific’s leading IaaS provider by revenue in U.S. dollars since 2018, according to technology research firm Gartner.

Alibaba to roll out its rival to ChatGPT across all its products (cnbc.com)

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From: Glenn Petersen4/12/2023 7:56:58 PM
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SoftBank moves to sell down most of its Alibaba stake

Japanese investor makes $7.2bn from forward sales of shares in Chinese ecommerce group as lucrative

Ryan McMorrow in Beijing, Eleanor Olcott in Hong Kong and Kana Inagaki in Tokyo
AN HOUR AGO
Financial Times

SoftBank has moved to sell almost all of its remaining shareholding in Alibaba, limiting its exposure to China and raising cash as the market downturn pummels the value of its technology investments.

The Japanese group, led by billionaire founder Masayoshi Son, has sold about $7.2bn worth of Alibaba shares this year through prepaid forward contracts, after a record $29bn selldown last year.

The forward sales, revealed through a Financial Times analysis of regulatory filings sent by post to the US Securities and Exchange Commission, will eventually cut SoftBank’s stake in the $262bn Chinese ecommerce group to just 3.8 per cent.

The contracts allow SoftBank the option to buy back the shares, but the group has settled previous deals by handing over the stock. The Japanese investor once owned as much as 34 per cent of Alibaba.

SoftBank’s selldown comes at a pivotal moment for the Japanese group, which is planning a blockbuster listing of UK chip designer Arm as it seeks to recover from a spate of failed investments and unprecedented losses. For Alibaba, it will mean the retreat of a longtime backer just as the Chinese group attempts to reinvent itself by splitting into six entities.

SoftBank’s selling spree has come as the Chinese group’s shares have plumbed six-year lows, a disappointing conclusion to one of the most successful technology investments ever made. Son paid $20mn for the bulk of SoftBank’s holding in the fledgling Chinese group more than two decades ago after meeting founder Jack Ma.

“He had no business plan and zero revenue, employees maybe 35 [or] 40,” Son later said on Bloomberg TV. “But his eyes [were] very strong, strong eyes, strong shining eyes. I could tell from the way he talked, the way he looked [at things], he has a charisma, he has a leadership.”



Ma’s penchant for speaking his mind turned into a liability in October 2020 when he criticised China’s state-owned banks at a financial summit in Shanghai. Beijing then suspended the blockbuster IPO of Alibaba’s sister company Ant, as President Xi Jinping launched a campaign to rein in the country’s tech groups.

The crackdown has cut Alibaba’s share price by 70 per cent, leaving SoftBank selling most of its holding at prices on a par with where Alibaba opened for trading in New York eight years ago.

Over the past 14 months, SoftBank reaped, on average, $92 a share from the forward sales of 389mn Alibaba shares, far below the company’s all-time high of $317 a share, according to filings supplied by data provider The Washington Service.

They show SoftBank most recently raised about $4.5bn in February from the forward sales of 46mn shares, coming after the sale of 30mn shares for $2.7bn in late December. SoftBank said the latter sale was not fully completed by the end of December and would be accounted for in its yet to be released financial report for the quarter that ended on March 31.

SoftBank declined to comment on the regulatory filings. But it said the Alibaba transactions reflected its shift to “a defensive mode” to address a more uncertain business environment. “We are bolstering our financial stability by increasing our liquidity on hand by raising cash,” it said.

It added that the additional amount it raised from Alibaba shares would be revealed when it reports its fourth-quarter results in May.



With forward sales, SoftBank generally lends its Alibaba shares to a broker, which sells the shares into the market over a period of days or weeks. The broker takes a fee before returning the proceeds to the Japanese group.

When the contracts come due, SoftBank can either fully relinquish its claim to the shares or pay the broker the market price to repurchase the shares on its behalf.

The filings show most of the recent deals were handled by Barclays, Mizuho Securities and SMBC Nikko Securities, which would earn less than 1 per cent of the proceeds as fees, according to a banker familiar with the deals. Their structure allows SoftBank to delay paying capital gains tax until settlement.

At the end of February, SoftBank had only 98mn shares of Alibaba left to sell, according to the FT’s estimates. On March 30, the group shifted how it held another 22.3mn shares “in light of the potential to use them for financing in the future,” SoftBank said in a statement.

While SoftBank has said that the monetisation of Alibaba shares was to shore up its finances, some investors have seen the move as a desperate means to lift its earnings figures, with analysts projecting a second consecutive year of heavy losses.

SoftBank has put cash harvested from the Alibaba selldown into its Vision Fund II, paid off debt and repurchased shares. Billions are also piling up in cash on its balance sheet, which stood at ¥5.8tn ($43bn) at the end of December, leading to a growing internal debate over how to spend the money, according to a person close to SoftBank.

SoftBank said it would continue to be selective with its investments, citing uncertain market conditions.

“There are divergent views internally on whether we should continue to be a bit more defensive?.?.?.?or whether now is the time to get back into investing,” said the person close to SoftBank. “[Executives] are coming around more and more to opening the spigot again.”

SoftBank moves to sell down most of its Alibaba stake | Financial Times (archive.ph)

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From: Julius Wong4/18/2023 7:54:41 AM
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Alibaba pops as China said to substantially reduce fine, charges on Ant Group

Apr. 18, 2023 7:19 AM ET
Alibaba Group Holding Limited (BABA)
By: Chris Ciaccia, SA News Editor
3 Comments

Adam Yee

Alibaba (NYSE: BABA) shares popped more than 2.5% in premarket trading on Tuesday as it was reported that Chinese regulators are expected to drastically reduce the fine and charges against Ant Group, the tech giant's financial technology arm.

Ant Group, which was facing a levy of more than $1B, is now expected to be fined of $728M, according to Reuters, citing three people with knowledge of the matter.

In addition to the smaller fine, Ant Group is likely to see reduced charges, with some of the wording of the charges curbed to include financial risks and operating without proper licenses, the people added.

The fine is slated to be announced in the coming months, the news outlet added.

The relationship between Ant Group, which operates the popular AliPay app, and the Chinese government has started to thaw in recent months after its $37 billion IPO was derailed in 2020. As late as last year, the initial public offering was said to be delayed "indefinitely" amid China's crackdown on the tech industry.

In January, however, Chinese regulators said Ant Group could raise $1.5B for its consumer finance unit, widely seen as an important step forward towards an eventual initial public offering.

Once the fine is levied, Ant Group may receive its long-awaited financial holding license and move towards a public listing.

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From: Julius Wong4/25/2023 3:49:19 PM
1 Recommendation   of 882
 
Alibaba shares lead Chinese tech losses as senators call for cloud sanctions

Apr. 25, 2023 2:53 PM ET
Alibaba Group Holding Limited (BABA), BIDU, JD NTES, TCEHY, KWEB, WB, PDD
By: Rex Crum, SA News Editor
11 Comments

da-kuk

Alibaba (NYSE: BABA) and other leading Chinese tech and Internet companies saw their share stumble as trading progressed Tuesday as a group of U.S. senators called for sanctions on a handful of Chinese cloud service providers.

The nine Republican senators, led by Tennessee Senator Bill Hagerty, sent the letter to the U.S. Commerce, State and Treasury departments, according to a report from Reuters, which said it had seen the letter. The senators want the Biden Administration to impose sanctions on Huawei Cloud and several other Chinese cloud companies due to national security concerns related to the companies ties to the Chinese military. Huawei has been on a Commerce Department blacklist for four years because of issues related to how it shares information with the Chinese government.

Alibaba ( BABA) shares fell more than 5% as its Alibaba Cloud service was included on the senators' list of companies to be sanctioned. Baidu (NASDAQ: BIDU) was off by almost 5% as its Baidu Cloud business made the senators' list, and Tencent Holdings ( OTCPK:TCEHY), with its Tencent Cloud service, fell almost 3% in late trading.

While the senators request doesn't mean there will be any immediate change in U.S. policy toward the Chinese companies, it is still likely to ratchet up the tension between the United States in China over the sale of technology products such as semiconductors, and what social media giant TikTok does with the information of its U.S. users.

Other Chinese tech and Internet stocks in the red included JD.com (NASDAQ: JD), down by 3%; gaming company NetEase ( NTES), which fell more than 6%; Weibo ( WB), which gave up more than 2% and PDD Holdings ( PDD), down by almost 4%.

The KraneShares CSI China ETF ( KWEB) was off by more than 3%.

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To: Julius Wong who wrote (860)5/8/2023 6:02:55 AM
From: Glenn Petersen
1 Recommendation   of 882
 
Alibaba logistics arm eyes up to $2 billion Hong Kong IPO - sources

By Scott Murdoc and Julie Zhu
Reuters
May 7, 2023



[1/2] Cainiao's logo, Alibaba's logistics unit, is seen at the warehouse in Wuxi, Jiangsu province, China October 26, 2020. Picture taken October 26, 2020. REUTERS/Aly Song/File Photo
----------------------------------

SYDNEY/HONG KONG, May 8 (Reuters) - Alibaba's (9988.HK) logistics arm aims to raise up to $2 billion via a listing in Hong Kong likely early next year, sources with knowledge of the matter said, bolstering hopes for a capital markets revival in the Asian financial hub.

Cainiao Network Technology's initial public offering (IPO) plan comes after Alibaba flagged in late March it would split its business into six units and that most of them would explore capital raisings or market debuts to help fund future growth.

Cainiao, which has started work on the IPO, is looking to raise between $1 billion and $2 billion in Hong Kong, according to three sources. They declined to be named because the listing deliberations are private.

The planned IPO, the size of which has not been reported before, is likely to be launched in early 2024, two of the sources said.

The sources cautioned that the plans are not finalised yet and remain subject to changes.

Cainiao said it would not comment on market speculation.

Alibaba did not respond to a request for comment.

Alibaba, which acts as a massive online marketplace for buyers and sellers, has in past years picked up stakes in top express delivery players to ensure reliable services for the group.

It co-founded Cainiao in 2013 with partners including department store owner Intime Group, conglomerate Fosun Group and a handful of logistic firms. Alibaba took control of Cainiao four years later and has lifted its stake to 67% from 47%.

Cainiao, which provides software and shares data with warehouses, carriers and logistics firms, reported 42 billion yuan ($6.07 billion) in revenue in the nine months ended December, up 22% year-on-year and accounting for 6% of Alibaba's total revenue.

The logistics arm's IPO plan is the first of the expected capital raisings for Alibaba's spun-off units to be reported publicly as it pursues the biggest restructuring in its 24-year history.

Analysts have said that the breakup could ease scrutiny over Chinese billionaire Jack Ma's sprawling business empire, which has been a target of local regulators as part of a broader crackdown on private enterprises since late 2020.

The other five units include Cloud Intelligence, Taobao Tmall Commerce, Local Services, Global Digital Commerce and Digital Media and Entertainment.

IPO PROSPECTS

Dealmakers hope that Cainiao's potential IPO, expected to be followed by market debuts from some of the other Alibaba units in the near-term, could help revive sluggish fundraising activities in Hong Kong.

While Alibaba has not divulged potential listing venues for the other units, bankers say that Hong Kong would be a preferred destination because of its proximity to the group's home market and Sino-U.S. tensions.

About $1.5 billion has been raised from IPOs in Hong Kong so far this year, marginally above the $1.2 billion raised in the same period last year, according to Refinitiv data.

Craig Coben, the former head of Bank of America's Asia-Pacific capital markets business, said the Alibaba spin-offs would be on the radar of major global investors.

"There will be international demand for these assets, although valuation may be a challenge given the losses that global investors have suffered from high-growth Chinese stocks," he said.

($1 = 6.9149 Chinese yuan renminbi)

Reporting by Scott Murdoch in Sydney and Julie Zhu in Hong Kong; Editing by Sumeet Chatterjee and Jamie Freed

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

Alibaba logistics arm eyes up to $2 billion Hong Kong IPO - sources | Reuters

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From: Harding1115/19/2023 4:15:48 AM
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The alibaba is best website for ever, they give us lot of helpful deal.

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From: Glenn Petersen5/24/2023 4:44:05 AM
   of 882
 
Alibaba to cut 7% of workforce in its cloud unit as it pursues IPO for the division

PUBLISHED TUE, MAY 23 202311:01 AM EDT
UPDATED TUE, MAY 23 202311:10 AM EDT
Arjun Kharpal @ARJUNKHARPAL
CNBC.com

KEY POINTS

-- Alibaba is cutting 7% of the workforce in its cloud computing division as the unit gears up for an initial public offering.

-- This comes after it announced plans in March to split the company into six business units each with their own chief executive and board of directors.

-- Last week, the company announced plans for a full spin-off of its cloud computing unit and said it intends for the division to become an independent publicly listed company.

Alibaba is cutting 7% of the workforce in its cloud computing division as the unit gears up for an initial public offering.

The move, confirmed to CNBC by a person familiar with the matter who preferred to remain anonymous because they were not able to speak publicly, will see the Chinese e-commerce giant offer severance packages to those affected. Alibaba has begun informing staff of the layoffs and is also helping them to move to different positions internally if they desire, the same source added.

This comes after it announced plans in March to split the company into six business units each with their own chief executive and board of directors.

Last week, the company announced plans for a full spin-off of its cloud computing unit and said it intends for the division to become an independent publicly listed company. Alibaba aims to complete the spin off within the next 12 months.

Alibaba’s CEO Daniel Zhang has long-seen cloud computing as a key part of the e-commerce giant’s future but it currently accounts for just 9% of the group’s total revenue. And revenue has been slowing significantly over the last few quarters. In fact, revenue fell 2% year-on-year in the first quarter of the year.

Zhang said on the company’s earnings call last week that this was “partially due to our proactive move to adjust our revenue structure and focus on high-quality growth, and also a result of external changes in market environment and customer composition.”

TikTok owner ByteDance began moving its international operations off of Alibaba’s cloud which continues to weigh on the company’s cloud business.

Still, Alibaba has made some headway with its cloud business over the past few years. It is the number one player by market share in China and number two in Asia-Pacific, just behind Amazon, according to Synergy Research Group. However, on a global level, it still trails giants Amazon, Microsoft and Google

Alibaba to cut 7% of workforce in its cloud unit as it pursues IPO (cnbc.com)

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From: Julius Wong6/15/2023 11:12:37 AM
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Alibaba, JD.com lead Chinese tech stocks higher as China cuts key interest rate

Jun. 15, 2023 10:00 AM ET
Alibaba Group Holding Limited (BABA) NTES, BIDU, TCEHY, WB, JD, BILI, PDD, KC
By: Chris Ciaccia, SA News Editor
4 Comments

maybefalse/iStock Unreleased via Getty Images

Alibaba (NYSE: BABA), JD.com ( JD) were among the leading Chinese technology stocks early on Thursday after the country's central bank cut a key interest rate as it hopes to provide a jolt to a struggling economy.

Alibaba ( BABA) gained 3.4% shortly before 10 a.m. EST, while JD.com ( JD) also tacked on more than 3%. Also seeing strong gains were PDD Holdings ( PDD), Baidu ( BIDU) and Tencent ( OTCPK:TCEHY).

Smaller Chinese tech stocks saw more muted gains, as Weibo ( WB) gained 2.8%, while NetEase ( NTES), Bilibili ( BILI) and Kingsoft Cloud Holdings ( KC) were mixed in early trading.

Separately on Thursday, it was reported that Alibaba ( BABA) is looking to develop local businesses outside China, with Europe being the main priority.

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From: Glenn Petersen6/15/2023 2:47:31 PM
   of 882
 
Alibaba to launch local versions of its China e-commerce site in Europe

PUBLISHED THU, JUN 15 202311:22 AM EDT
UPDATED 3 HOURS AGO
Arjun Kharpal @ARJUNKHARPAL
CNBC.com

KEY POINTS

-- Michael Evans, president of Alibaba, said the company will bring one of its China e-commerce services Tmall into Europe.

-- Alibaba’s international push has focused around, AliExpress which lists goods that come from China and are shipped to Europe.

-- However, Evans’ suggestion is that Tmall in Europe would focus on selling local brands to local shoppers.

PARIS — Alibaba will expand one of its key China e-commerce sites into Europe, the company’s president said on Thursday, marking a significant step up in the Chinese tech giant’s international push.

The announcement comes just over two months after Alibaba, China’s biggest e-commerce firm, announced plans to split its business into six units, a move designed to give each unit more autonomy and faster decision-making powers.

Michael Evans, president of Alibaba, said the company will bring one of its China e-commerce services Tmall into Europe.

“So you will see something called Tmall which we have in China, become Tmall in Europe, which means we will serve local brands and local consumers in the local market,” Evans said at the Viva Tech conference in Paris, France.

Evans revealed the company is currently doing a pilot project in Spain, which “will expand across Europe.”

In China, Tmall is an Alibaba site and app that has a big focus on selling foreign brands to Chinese consumers.

Launching Tmall in Europe reflects a significant shift in strategy for Alibaba in its international e-commerce operations.

While Alibaba’s international push in online shopping is not new, it has focused on a site called AliExpress in Europe. However, AliExpress has goods shipped from China into Europe. Shipping times are often long though products may be cheaper than rivals.

However, Evans’ suggestion is that Tmall in Europe would focus on selling local brands to local shoppers. It’s unclear if this would be merged in any way with AliExpress.

One of Alibaba’s six independent businesses is called the Taobao Tmall Commerce Group which focuses on its two main e-commerce products in China. But it also has a Global Digital Commerce unit that focuses on Alibaba’s e-commerce push abroad.

“Europe is a top priority for all of the businesses that have an international component. So by that, I mean, the international commerce businesses, the cloud business, the logistics business in particular,” Evans said.

Alibaba to launch local version of China e-commerce site Tmall in Europe (cnbc.com)

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From: Glenn Petersen6/20/2023 5:15:35 AM
   of 882
 
Alibaba says Eddie Wu to succeed Daniel Zhang as CEO in surprise move

PUBLISHED TUE, JUN 20 202312:18 AM EDT
UPDATED 2 HOURS AGO
Clement Tan @CLEMTAN
Arjun Kharpal @ARJUNKHARPAL
CNBC.com

KEY POINTS

-- The company also announced Joe Tsai will take Zhang’s place as the group’s chairman.

-- Zhang will continue to lead the Alibaba Cloud Intelligence Group as chairman and chief executive after this change, which the company said will take effect Sept. 10.

Alibaba Group said in a surprise announcement Tuesday Eddie Wu will succeed Daniel Zhang as its chief executive, a move that will free Zhang to focus on the company’s cloud intelligence business.

This succession plan comes after China’s largest e-commerce company said in March it will restructure its company into six business groups in the most significant reorganization in its history, aiming to reinvigorate the company after slowing economic growth in its home market and tougher Beijing regulations combined to hit its bottom line.

“As everyone is well aware, the development of core technologies such as cloud computing, big data and AI will lead to a tremendous transformation of our society and is of utmost strategic significance,” Zhang said in an internal memo to Alibaba staff.

“Cloud Intelligence Group is now full speed ahead on its spin-off plans and we are approaching a crucial stage of the process, so it is the right time for me to dedicate my full attention and time to the business,” he added.

Alibaba shares pared losses after the announcement and were trading down 1% in Hong Kong on Tuesday afternoon.

The company also announced Joe Tsai will take Zhang’s place as the group’s chairman. Brooklyn Nets owner Tsai is currently Alibaba’s executive vice chairman.

Zhang will continue to lead the Alibaba Cloud Intelligence Group as chairman and chief executive after this change, which the company said will take effect Sept. 10.

Alibaba shake-up

Alibaba said last month it plans to complete a full spin-off of its cloud computing unit, aiming for the division to become an independent publicly listed company within the next 12 months.

“From a corporate governance perspective, we also need clear separation between the board and management team as Cloud Intelligence Group proceeds down the path to becoming an independent public company,” Zhang said in the internal memo.

Other than cloud intelligence, the other five business units include its Taobao Tmall business; its local services arm focusing on food delivery and mapping; the Cainiao Smart logistics business; its global e-commerce business including AliExpress and Lazada; and its digital media and entertainment business.

While Taobao Tmall will remain wholly owned by Alibaba, the company said in March that the reorganization will allow each business group to be nimbler, raise outside funding and go public.

Zhang’s successor Wu is one of Alibaba’s co-founders and currently chairman of Taobao and Tmall Group.

Wu has held a multitude of roles in his time at the company, including heading technology at Alibaba’s inception, as well as chief technology officer at Alipay and Taobao. He was also director of Alibaba Health Information Technology and founded Vision Plus Capital, a venture capital firm focused on investing in advanced technologies, enterprise services and digital health care.

Zhang has been Alibaba’s chief executive since 2015 and took over from Jack Ma as chairman in 2019.

Alibaba says Eddie Wu to succeed Daniel Zhang as CEO in surprise move (cnbc.com)

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