Ex-CEO’s Unexpected Departure Unveiled by Alibaba

Ex-CEO’s Unexpected Departure Unveiled by Alibaba

Chinese e-commerce‍ giant Alibaba has announced the surprise⁢ departure⁢ of ‌former CEO Daniel Zhang, who had been set Monday to take charge⁣ of a key subsidiary as the firm undergoes a major restructuring.

Hangzhou-based Alibaba ⁢is one of China’s ⁢most prominent ⁣technology firms, with business operations spanning cloud ‌computing, ⁢e-commerce, logistics, ‍media ⁢and entertainment, and artificial ‌intelligence.

After years of turbulence in ‌the‍ Chinese tech sector, Alibaba in March ⁤announced‍ the biggest restructuring‍ in‌ its history, ⁣dividing itself into six⁤ entities, with ​the goal of listing them on the‍ stock exchange separately.

CEO Daniel Zhang was⁢ due ⁣to take charge of the firm’s ⁢new cloud computing branch, now⁢ a separate‍ entity, on Monday.

But two months after ⁣announcing his appointment, Alibaba​ said its now ex-boss‍ was no longer with the company.

“The board of our Company expresses its ‌deepest appreciation to ⁤Mr​ Zhang for his‌ contributions to Alibaba Group over the past 16 years,” ⁢the company said in a statement to the Hong Kong Stock Exchange, where it is listed, late‍ on Sunday.

It gave no reason for his departure.

Plans for a‍ spin-off cloud computing firm would ⁢go ahead, Alibaba said, “under a⁣ separate management team to be appointed”.

The⁣ company announced in June that Zhang would be replaced‍ by Joseph Tsai ⁣as chairman and Eddie Wu ⁤as CEO.

The executive played ⁣a vital⁢ role in ⁢the company’s success ⁢in the past decade, spearheading the now hugely ‌popular Singles’ ⁢Day shopping festival since its first edition in 2009.

Shares in the⁤ firm sank​ nearly 3.5 percent Monday — the first working day of its new reorganisation into six distinct branches.

In addition to e-commerce and cloud ​computing, Alibaba’s reach ‍stretches into everything from logistics to media, entertainment and ⁢artificial intelligence.

But its vast size brought​ it into the crosshairs of Chinese regulators as Beijing sought to crack down on the tech sector.

In 2020, ‌Alibaba became the country’s first tech giant to bear the ‍brunt of​ increased oversight, when authorities called⁢ off what ⁣would ‍have⁣ become one ⁣of the most valuable public listings ‌in history — ‍valued ‍at $34 billion –⁢ for its former subsidiary Ant Group.

Ant Group is the owner of Alipay, a mobile payment application widely used ‌in China.

One‌ month after officials hit ‍the brakes on its IPO, ‍Alibaba was investigated for alleged anti-competitive practices, then issued a $2.8 billion fine.

And in July​ authorities ⁢fined Ant Group nearly ⁤$1 ⁢billion for breaching banking regulations.

2023-09-12 00:48:02
Link ‍from www.ibtimes.com

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