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Alibaba Shares Rebound After Report of Action Against ‘Ma’

Shares plunged, then recovered, after CCTV revised a report to make clear the individual involved was not billionaire Alibaba founder Jack Ma


Chinese financial authorities are set to issue a fine of at least 8 billion yuan ($1.1 billion) on Ant Group, sources have revealed.
Jack Ma has stayed out of the limelight since his infamous speech in late 2020 and the crackdown by regulators on his and many other tech companies in China. File photo from 2015 by Reuters.

 

Alibaba shares plunged around 9% on Tuesday after state broadcaster CCTV reported that Chinese authorities had acted against a person surnamed Ma, before recouping losses as the report was later revised to clarify that it was not the company’s founder Jack Ma.

CCTV reported that authorities in Alibaba’s headquarters Hangzhou city acted against the individual surnamed Ma, whose name consisted of two Chinese characters, for using the internet to engage in activities endangering national security.

The broadcaster later revised the article to make clear that the individual in question had a three-character name, indicating that it was not billionaire Alibaba founder Jack Ma.

A spokesperson for Alibaba did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment on the media report.

Alibaba stock dropped as much as 9.4% in early trading in Hong Kong in a firmer broader market. It later pared most of its losses and was trading down 1.1% by 0310 GMT.

“Talk that a guy with the surname Ma in Hangzhou helped out an investigation triggered the panic, but as clarification came up… (it helped) calm down the market,” Steven Leung, a sales director at brokerage UOB Kay Hian, said.

 

Alibaba Shares Under Pressure

Shares of Alibaba and other Chinese internet companies have been under pressure in the last couple of years amid an unprecedented regulatory crackdown on the sector for violations of anti-monopoly, data privacy, and other rules.

Authorities cracked down on Ma’s business empire after he gave a speech in Shanghai in October 2020 accusing financial watchdogs of stifling innovation.

Regulators suspended the $37 billion listing of his fintech firm Ant Group two days before its planned debut on November 5, 2020, ordered that Ant be restructured and launched anti-trust investigations into Ma’s businesses, eventually leading to a record $2.75 billion fine for Alibaba in April 2021.

Ma himself has been keep a low public profile since the crackdown began.

 

  • Reuters with additional editing by Sean OMeara

 

 

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Sean O'Meara

Sean O'Meara is an Editor at Asia Financial. He has been a newspaper man for more than 30 years, working at local, regional and national titles in the UK as a writer, sub-editor, page designer and print editor. A football, cricket and rugby fan, he has a particular interest in sports finance.