Alibaba overhauls e-commerce businesses, names new CFO
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[December 06, 2021] By
Brenda Goh
SHANGHAI (Reuters) -Alibaba Group Holding
Ltd said it will reorganise its international and domestic e-commerce
businesses and replace its CFO - changes that come as the tech giant
grapples with an onslaught of competition, a slowing economy and a
regulatory crackdown.
It will form two new units - international digital commerce and China
digital commerce which it said was part of efforts to become more agile
and accelerate growth.
The international digital commerce unit will include AliExpress which
sells to retail buyers particularly in Europe and South America, its
Southeast Asian e-commerce business Lazada and Alibaba.com which is more
focused on selling to overseas business customers.
It will be headed by Jiang Fan, who had been in charge of its main
Chinese retail marketplaces, and the change is seen in line with
Alibaba's aim to make 'globalisation' a key focus area in addition to
cloud computing and domestic consumer spending.
Globalisation "helps Alibaba to get new traffic volume externally (and)
seek new growth potential while China has been increasing supervision,"
said Hong Kong-based Guotai Junan analyst Danny Law.
The China digital commerce unit will include Alibaba's two main
marketplaces, Tmall for established brands and Taobao which welcomes all
kinds of merchants. It will be led by Trudy Dai, who has previously
overseen a number of Alibaba platforms.
The new structure for domestic e-commerce puts Dai in charge of all
China retail marketplaces, including Taocaicai - its community
e-commerce service, Taobao Deals as well as Lingshoutong, a retail
management platform for mom and pop stores, said 86research.com analyst
Xiaoyan Wang.
"This could possibly unlock more synergies via cross-selling and
integration of supply chain," she said.
Alibaba also announced that deputy chief financial officer Toby Xu will
succeed Maggie Wu as CFO from April, describing his appointment as part
of the company's leadership succession plan. Xu joined Alibaba from PWC
three years ago.
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The logo of Alibaba Group is lit up at its office building in
Beijing, China August 9, 2021. REUTERS/Tingshu Wang
The e-commerce giant's Hong Kong-listed shares slid 6% in early morning trade,
tracking Friday declines made in the United States.
U.S.-listed shares of Chinese firms have tumbled on concerns about stricter
regulatory scrutiny at home in the wake of plans by Didi Global Inc to delist
from the New York Stock Exchange.
Hit by weaker growth for the economy and fierce competition from a plethora of
rivals, Alibaba last month slashed its forecast for annual revenue growth
https://www.reuters.com/business/
chinas-alibaba-misses-quarterly-revenue-expectations-2021-11-18 to its slowest
pace since its 2014 stock market debut. It also saw sales at its banner event,
online shopping festival Singles Day, grow at their slowest rate ever
https://www.reuters.com/technology/
chinas-alibaba-kicks-off-final-hours-singles-day-shopping-event-2021-11-10.
Chinese regulators have also cracked down on the tech and other sectors,
particularly on anti-trust issues that have seen Alibaba abandon a policy of
requiring merchants to exclusively set up shop on its platforms. The company was
fined a record 18 billion yuan ($2.8 billion) in April for abusing its dominant
market position.
($1 = 6.3686 Chinese yuan)
(Reporting Brenda Goh in Shanghai and Scott Murdoch in Hong Kong; Additional
reporting by Akriti Sharma in Bengaluru; Editing by Edwina Gibbs)
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