BEIJING – Shares in Alibaba today slumped upon the Chinese e-commerce giant’s announcement that it will invest 100 billion yuan (RM64.25 billion) in charitable causes, after President Xi Jinping called for the rich to do more to tackle inequality.
Last month, he urged China’s wealthiest companies and entrepreneurs to strengthen philanthropy efforts and “give back to society” in order to redistribute wealth as part of his “common prosperity” initiative.
In response, Alibaba – which has already fallen foul of Beijing’s sharp scrutiny this year – said it will put money into areas including tech innovation, small and medium businesses, the welfare of gig workers, and healthcare equality.
Chairman Daniel Zhang said the company is “eager to do our part to support the realisation of common prosperity”.
Shares in Alibaba slumped as much as 4% on the news in Hong Kong trading today, as traders worry about the potential impact on the firm’s bottom line.
“The donation doesn’t guarantee that there will not be more regulations to target at Alibaba,” Castor Pang, head of research at Core Pacific Yamaichi International HK Ltd, told Bloomberg News.
“It’s more or less affecting the whole tech sector sentiment today.”
Chinese authorities have enforced a sweeping regulatory crackdown on the nation’s tech sector after years of runaway growth. Alibaba was fined a record US$2.75 billion (RM11.4 billion) in April, and a bumper initial public offering of its fintech arm was scrapped at the last minute.
The crackdown has also widened to include online gaming, entertainment, and education tech in recent months.
Many major tech companies have faced scrutiny over their treatment of gig workers, such as ride-hailing and delivery drivers, who often work long hours without protections like social and medical insurance.
The earmarked 100 billion yuan is the equivalent of 31% of Alibaba’s current cash balance, according to Bloomberg Intelligence.
It is double what social media and gaming giant Tencent pledged last month to schemes dedicated to boosting low incomes, rural revitalisation, and education equality.
Alibaba added that it will establish a 20 billion yuan development fund in its home province of Zhejiang, also the site of China’s first “pilot zone” for common prosperity. – AFP, September 3, 2021