Latest News:  

English>>Business

Now it's time to enjoy life, says Jack Ma (2)

(China Daily)

10:29, May 11, 2013

Former Alibaba CEO Ma Yun (looking left) hugs his successor Lu Zhaoxi, also known as Jonathan Lu, in Hangzhou on Friday. Dong Xuming / For China Daily

Ma: Alibaba eyes areas beyond e-commerce

Chinese-language media said Ma is going to become China director of The Nature Conservancy, a Washington-headquartered NGO with global assets of $3.7 billion and which entered China in 1998. It aims to solve environmental problems.

Friday marked the 10th birthday of Alibaba's consumer-to-consumer business website Taobao. Alibaba also operates another two e-commerce sites — Alibaba.com and the business-to-consumer platform Tmall.

Before Ma's departure, Alibaba delivered a rosy financial report, overtaking Tencent Holdings Ltd to become the most profitable Internet company in China in the fourth quarter of last year.

Alibaba's net profit nearly tripled, to $642.2 million, during the period, supported by an 80 percent rise in revenue, according to the latest regulatory filing by shareholder Yahoo Inc.

Tencent reported net profit of $552.2 million in the fourth quarter, up 36 percent from a year earlier.

Xie Wen, an IT expert and former president of Yahoo China, which is a part of Alibaba, said, "Tencent conducts businesses in multiple areas, while Alibaba has so far only demonstrated specialties in e-commerce."

Hong Bo, a Beijing-based analyst and founder of IT consultancy company IT5G, said, "Big Internet companies are always looking for possible revenue sources, or to launch mergers and acquisitions to beef up product lines directly. Alibaba is the one that does both."

In previous interviews, Ma reiterated Alibaba's ambition to tap into finance and data business, in addition to e-commerce.

It said in March it plans to set up Alibaba Small and Micro Financial Services Group to consolidate its online payment and micro-loan businesses. It will provide financial services for consumers and small and micro-enterprises — those with an annual turnover of less than 30 million yuan ($4.8 million).

Qiu Lin, a stock analyst with Guosen Securities Co in Hong Kong, said Alibaba might have a much bigger scope for growth after entering the financial services industry.

"The net profit of China's Internet companies was roughly 100 billion yuan last year, while that of major listed Chinese banks was about 1 trillion yuan," Qiu said.

Based on hundreds of millions of users, Alibaba produces a huge volume of data on its platforms. Che Pingjue, chairman of Alibaba's internal data committee, said during a conference in Hangzhou in April, "Alibaba is born to be a big-data company".

【1】 【2】 【3】 【4】 【5】 【6】 【7】

Email|Print|Comments(Editor:HuangBeibei、Ye Xin)

Leave your comment0 comments

  1. Name

  

Selections for you


  1. Victory Day parade held at Red Square

  2. New-type fighters in night flight training

  3. Italian container ship accident

  4. Landslide in quake-hit Lushan kills 3

  5. Domestic violence by men 'shocking': survey

  6. Flight attendent recruitment in Wuhan

  7. Jiang Yiyan covers Darizi magazine

  8. Blacksmiths in Gangmen village

  9. Quake-hit ebony struggling to recover

  10. Ferrari planning sales push in China

Most Popular

Opinions

  1. Negative forecast leads Rio Tinto to lay-off
  2. Suffer the children, suffer the country
  3. China, India have wisdom to handle sensitive issues
  4. Ending 'too big to fail' going to be hard work
  5. PwC: Environment hard for Chinese banks
  6. The Rise of the South
  7. Chance for dual face-to-face talks slim
  8. China's regional disparity offers growth potential
  9. US war on terror bent by strategy
  10. China's rating not jeopardized by slower growth

What’s happening in China

Jack Ma to resign as Alibaba CEO

  1. Infectious diseases kill 1,260 in China in April
  2. New campaign targets online news editing
  3. Black clouds cover Guangzhou, S China
  4. Chinese nurses' education level rises
  5. Breeding industry suffers widespread losses