Alibaba is Replacing Chairman and CEO
Daniel Zhang
The Chinese e-commerce company has been
struggling with slow growth and poor stock performance
Alibaba
Group replacing top executive Daniel Zhang by naming company veteran and
Brooklyn Nets owner Joe Tsai as the new chairman, as the Chinese e-commerce
giant grapples with slow growth and poor stock performance.
The
reshuffling at the top, effective on Sept. 10, also comes as Alibaba, which has
emerged in recent months from Beijing’s clampdown on internet companies,
undergoes a major reorganization. Alibaba is in the process of splitting itself
into six independently run companies that could seek separate initial public
offerings, a move that would break up the business empire that co-founder Jack
Ma had built over two decades.
Eddie
Wu, who heads the Taobao and Tmall domestic e-commerce business, will succeed
Zhang as chief executive and replace Zhang on the board, the company said in a
statement Tuesday.
Tsai—born
in Taiwan and a graduate of Yale University—and Wu are both company veterans
who have been with Alibaba since 1999 and, together with Ma, helped develop the
group’s business strategies and corporate culture.
A
decade ago, Wu, who is a less-known co-founder led the company’s strategy to
develop and give priority to its smartphone shopping sites as consumers shifted
to using the mobile internet.
Zhang
is currently heading Alibaba’s cloud-computing unit and will continue to do so,
Alibaba said in its statement.
In
May, Alibaba said it planned to fully spin off its cloud business and complete
its public listing in the next 12 months. It didn’t immediately respond to a
request for comment on Zhang’s letter.
Ma,
the billionaire co-founder who in recent years kept a low profile after he
appeared to fall out with Beijing, was recently in Hangzhou, where Alibaba is
based. On Saturday, he attended an annual global mathematics competition that
he started in 2018 and chatted with the finalists, according to a statement by
Alibaba’s research unit.
Ma
remains the biggest shareholder of Alibaba and still cares very much about the
company, Michael Evans, Alibaba’s president, said at a technology event in
Paris last week.
Alibaba
has been grappling with sluggish growth, facing a cooling domestic economy and
rising competition from homegrown upstarts such as PDD Holding’s Pinduoduo
e-commerce platform and ByteDance’s Douyin short-video platform.
In
the January-to-March quarter, Alibaba posted the slowest revenue growth for the
second straight quarter since it went public in 2014.
Alibaba
listed in New York following a blockbuster IPO that remains one of the world’s
largest-ever stock sales. Zhang was promoted from chief operating officer to
CEO the following year and became the company’s executive chairman in 2019 when
Ma stepped down.
Under
Zhang, Alibaba was for a time China’s most valuable publicly listed company,
with a market capitalization that topped $850 billion at its peak in October
2020. Shortly after, its financial-services affiliate, Ant Group, was forced by
Beijing to cancel plans for listings in Shanghai and Hong Kong. Chinese
regulators amped up their scrutiny on Ant, Alibaba and the broader Chinese
internet-technology sector. Alibaba was subsequently hit with a record $2.8
billion antitrust fine.
Its
shares have lost close to $600 billion in market value from their record high
and briefly fell below their New York IPO price last year. Longtime shareholder
SoftBank Group of Japan recently unwound its stake in Alibaba.
Alibaba’s
Hong Kong-listed shares were 1.6% lower in Tuesday afternoon trading after the
company mapped out its leadership succession plan.
Alibaba’s
restructuring culminates a years long shift inside the company to make it more
nimble. Alibaba’s various businesses will be split up into six major areas:
cloud computing, Chinese e-commerce, global e-commerce, digital mapping and
food delivery, logistics, and media and entertainment.