Tencent to donate 2
percent of profit as Chinese online charity grows
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[September 23, 2016]
By Sijia Jiang
HONG KONG (Reuters) - Chinese
billionaire Pony Ma Huateng, the founder of internet group Tencent,
on Friday said his company would donate 2 percent of its annual
profit to charity as mobile technology and new philanthropy laws in
China make donations easier.
Ma's pledge follows China's introduction of new laws earlier this
month that provided a legal framework for approved internet
companies to raise and manage funds for charity.
It also comes days after Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg and his
wife Priscilla Chan said they would donate more than $3 billion
toward a plan to "cure, prevent or manage" all disease.
Ma said China's first charity law provided a missing legal framework
in Chinese philanthropy operations and allowed more flexibility in
their administration.
China's self-made tech billionaires have in recent years topped the
nation's philanthropist list. Ma and Tencent co-founder Chen Yidan
were named in a report by the Hurun Research Institute in June as
the nation's top two givers in the past year.
Ma, who in April pledged 100 million company shares worth more than
$2 billion to a personal charity fund in April in one of China's
largest philanthropic pledges, has vowed to use technology to
transform China's public welfare efforts.
In 2014, Alibaba cofounders Jack Ma and Joe Tsai pledged share
options worth about US$3 billion at the time to charity.
In December 2015, Facebook's Zuckerberg made one of the largest
pledges in history when he and his wife said they would donate 99
percent of their company shares to charity.
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Tencent Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Pony Ma Huateng attends
a news conference announcing the company's results in Hong Kong,
China March 17, 2016. REUTERS/Bobby Yip/File Photo
Tencent is China's largest social media network and entertainment
company and operates the popular messaging app WeChat. It made a
profit of 29.12 billion yuan ($4.37 billion) in 2015, which would
put its 2 percent charitable pledge at about $87 million.
It is currently the most valuable company listed in Asia.
China's first laws on charity, which came into effect on September 1, allow only
approved internet platforms to raise funds. Public donation platforms by Tencent,
Alibaba and Baidu were among the ones on the list of the first 13 approved
platforms published in August.
(Reporting by Sijia Jiang; Editing by Sam Holmes)
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