Internal Post by Alibaba Executive Aims to Address Staff Concerns Regarding Jack Ma’s Share Sale

Internal Post by Alibaba Executive Aims to Address Staff Concerns Regarding Jack Ma’s Share Sale

SHANGHAI/BEIJING, Nov 22 (Reuters) – A‌ top Alibaba executive told staff on Wednesday that​ it was a “coincidence”‍ that‍ a plan by former⁤ chief Jack Ma’s family trust to sell some shares in ⁤the firm was disclosed on the same day the firm scrapped‍ its cloud unit’s listing.

In a move seen as an effort to quell ongoing unease‍ within⁢ the e-commerce ‌giant, Jiang Fang, an Alibaba (9988.HK) partner and its ‌chief talent ⁤officer, said in a post on the ⁤firm’s intranet​ seen by Reuters that Ma’s office had earlier this year⁣ made a plan⁤ to sell some shares to reinvest in ⁣agriculture and public welfare projects.

They were required ​by U.S. securities rules to disclose the plan by mid-November, she said.

“Nov. 16 happened to be the disclosure time set, but the stockbrokers did ⁢not know that this day was the day when the company was set to release its financial report,” Jiang said, adding ⁣that the⁤ “coincidence” had created‌ a “severe misunderstanding”.

Investors wiped some $20 billion off⁢ Alibaba’s‌ market ​value last Friday after⁤ the company abruptly scrapped‌ plans to spin off its cloud and groceries businesses.

Analysts ⁤also​ said​ a⁢ regulatory filing that ‌came out hours before the disclosure saying‌ that Ma’s family trust intended to sell 10 ​million American Depository Shares in Alibaba hurt sentiment as it raised eyebrows about Ma’s commitment to the future of‍ the company he‌ co-founded.

Two company sources told Reuters that Ma’s move had generated a lot of discussion within the company, as⁤ did Jiang’s post.

Alibaba did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

Jack Ma Foundation, the philanthropic organization ‍that handles media queries for the ⁣billionaire, said‍ in a statement to Reuters the reported stock sale⁢ has⁤ not occurred, adding that ⁢the messages Jiang posted in the Alibaba ⁣intranet are all factual.

In her internal note, Jiang also repeated comments from Ma’s family office shared with the Alibaba-owned newspaper South China Morning Post on Friday that Ma remained “very positive” about Alibaba and that his family trust eventually did not sell a single‌ share.

Jiang also said rumors that the company was going to ​lay off 25,000 people⁣ were untrue,‍ adding that Alibaba had filed a​ police report over the matter.

Alibaba in March announced plans to carve out the cloud business as ⁤part of a ⁤restructuring, the biggest in its 24-year history, that broke the company up into six units.

The‌ company has also ⁣been grappling with some⁣ upheaval in its top ranks, welcoming a⁤ new CEO, Eddie Wu, in September. That same‌ month, former group CEO Daniel Zhang abruptly quit his position​ as cloud unit head, just two months after announcing his new ⁣focus would be cloud computing.

Reporting by Casey Hall in Shanghai and⁤ Jenny Wang in Beijing; Editing by Brenda Goh and David Evans

Our⁣ Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles. Acquire Licensing Rights,​ opens new tabCasey HallThomson​ ReutersCasey⁤ has reported on China’s consumer​ culture from her base in Shanghai for more than a decade,…

Article from www.reuters.com rnrn

Exit mobile version