Billionaire Alibaba founder Jack Ma spending his time on philanthropy and hobbies like painting
Alibaba founder Jack Ma is still lying low, focusing his efforts on hobbies and philanthropy, according to a company executive.
“He’s lying low right now, I talk to him every day,” Joe Tsai, Alibaba’s executive vice chairman said in an interview on CNBC’s “Squawk Box.” “He’s actually doing very, very well. He’s taken up painting as a hobby, it’s actually pretty good.”
The billionaire founder has had a rocky year with the Chinese government, leading to time out of the public eye. In October, Ma made negative comments about Chinese financial regulators just days ahead of the initial public offering of Ant Group in Shanghai and Hong Kong, which would have been the world’s biggest. However, regulators effectively pulled the plug on the IPO two days before it was set to take place.
After the IPO was suspended, Ma dropped out of the spotlight, leading to rumors that he was missing. A source at the time told CNBC Ma was just laying low, and he later reappeared in a video for his charitable foundation in January.
“The idea that Jack has this enormous amount of power, I think that’s not quite right. He is just like you and me, he’s a normal individual. He built a tremendous company of this scale, he’s done great things for society … I think today he just wants to sort of say, ‘Hey, I want to focus on what I really want to spend time on,’ which is all the hobbies, all the philanthropy.”
Regulators also opened a probe into the company’s monopolistic practices in December. In April, the government hit the company with a $2.8 billion fine, saying it abused its market dominance.
Tsai said the company is moving forward from the fine.
“I think you have to separate what’s happening to Jack and what’s happening to our business. Our business is under some kind of restructuring on the financial side of things, and also in antitrust regulation. We had to pay a big fine. But we’ve gotten that behind us, so we’re looking forward,” Tsai said.
— CNBC’s Arjun Kharpal contributed to this report.