China's Ant Group CEO leaves after failed IPO prompts revamp
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[March 13, 2021] By
Yingzhi Yang and Sumeet Chatterjee
(Reuters) - China's Ant Group Chief
Executive Officer Simon Hu has unexpectedly resigned amid a
regulatory-driven overhaul of the financial technology giant's business,
the first top management exit since a scuppered $37 billion initial
public offering.
Hu, who was named chief executive of the Alibaba Group Holding affiliate
in 2019, will be replaced by company veteran and Executive Chairman Eric
Jing, Ant said in a statement on Friday.
Hu's exit from the company comes as Ant is working on plans to shift to
a financial holding company structure following intense regulatory
pressure to subject it to rules and capital requirements similar to
those for banks.
That pressure abruptly scuttled Ant's IPO last year, which would have
been the world's biggest.
Hu resigned for personal reasons, Ant said in a statement, without
elaborating.
"Following the board's thorough discussions, we have decided to respect
Simon's personal request and support him fully in his new mission," Jing
said in an internal memo, an excerpt of which was seen by Reuters.
Jing will continue in his current role as chairman, he said.
U.S.-listed shares in billionaire Jack Ma's Alibaba dropped as much as
3.9% in the morning trade on Friday.
Hu's departure is the first major management change since the IPO was
scrapped. He was one of the key executives responsible for managing the
company's mega dual-listing in Hong Kong and Shanghai.
FINANCIAL PROBLEMS
Ma's business empire has been at the centre of a crackdown following an
Oct. 24 speech in which he blasted China's regulatory system.
Regulators have since been tightening scrutiny of the country's
technology sector, with Alibaba taking much of the heat. The regulator
launched an official anti-trust probe into Alibaba in December.
Ma, who is not known for shying away from the limelight, disappeared
from the public eye for about three months, prompting frenzied
speculation about his whereabouts. He re-emerged in January in a
50-second video appearance.
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Simon Hu, CEO of Ant Group, is seen on a giant screen as he delivers
a speech at the INCLUSION Fintech Conference in Shanghai, China
September 24, 2020. REUTERS/Cheng Leng
Ant's financial holding structure is expected to weigh on its valuation, as the
fintech firm was valued as a technology firm in its previous fundraising rounds.
Typically, valuations are much higher on technology firms than on financial
companies.
The change in management also comes days after some Ant staff expressed
frustration on social media for not being able to sell the company shares they
own after Chinese regulators abruptly halted the company's market debut.
Jing told Ant employees that the company would review its staff incentive
programmes and roll out some measures starting from April to help solve their
financial problems, according to two people who saw the messages.
The listing in November of Ant, whose businesses include consumer lending and
insurance products distribution, would have made some of the company's employees
millionaires or billionaires.
Although Ma has stepped down from corporate positions and earnings calls, he
retains significant influence over Alibaba and Ant and promotes them globally at
business and political events.
Hu joined Ant in 2005 and has worked in various roles in the group as well as at
Alibaba, according to his LinkedIn profile.
Jing has been Ant's executive chairman since 2018 and before that he held
various positions at the company including president and chief operating
officer, according to his profile on the World Bank website. He joined Alibaba
in 2007.
(Reporting by Yingzhi Yang and Cheng Leng in Beijing, Sumeet Chatterjee in Hong
Kong and Eva Mathews in Bengaluru, Editing by Shailesh Kuber and Emelia
Sithole-Matarise)
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