Alibaba is replacing eight-year veteran chief Daniel Zhang at the helm of a Chinese ecommerce leader bleeding market share and struggling to revive growth in the post-Covid era.
Executive vice-chairman Joseph Tsai, a long-time confidant of billionaire co-founder Jack Ma, will take Zhang’s position as the chairman of the board. Eddie Wu, now chairman of Alibaba’s core Taobao and Tmall online commerce divisions, will take over as chief executive of the $240 billion company.
Zhang’s shock departure comes after Alibaba announced a six-way restructuring to try and juice growth and create a family of stand-alone leaders in businesses from cloud computing and logistics to international commerce. He unveiled his grand vision in detail just as Alibaba posted its third consecutive quarter of single-digit revenue growth, reinforcing concerns that a Chinese consumer spending rebound may be farther out than anticipated.
“The good thing is that the new CEO and chairman are all co-founders of the company and are the closest to Jack Ma. That means Ma remains the spiritual leader of Alibaba,” said Kenny Wen, head of investment strategy at KGI Asia. “I don’t think the management change signals a big strategy change.”
Is the cost-of-living crisis over? According to the head of Ibec, it never happened
Can power-hungry data centres help our green energy targets?
‘I could have gone to California. At this rate, I probably would have raised about half a billion dollars’
Christmas tech for kids: great gift ideas with safety features for parental peace of mind
Zhang will remain head of the cloud business. He took the helm in 2015 after rising to prominence as one of the architects of Alibaba’s “new retail” initiative, intended to marry physical and online retail and extend the company’s dominance into areas from malls to supermarkets. He became chairman a few years later as growth surged and Alibaba at one point became China’s most valuable company.
Then in 2020, regulators cracked down on Ma and his Ant Group after the billionaire angered regulators. Beijing began a clampdown on the privately owned tech sphere shortly after, accusing Alibaba of monopolistic behaviour before levying a record fine for the alleged violations.
The company thereafter never regained its stratospheric growth, particularly as new entrants such as ByteDance and PDD sapped its core business. It began to lose market share in the cloud, its other engine of growth, to state-backed rivals.
This brings “old Alibaba management back to the stage again,” said Willer Chen, a senior research analyst at Forsyth Barr Asia. “Not sure whether it is a good thing for Alibaba given now the key should be new growth driver and the restructuring plan.” – Bloomberg