Where is Jack Ma? The Alibaba founder who used to come at least once a month to the bar that was opened by the tech company's executives in early 2019, hasn’t been around since late last year, said one worker, who would only speak on the condition of anonymity. HHB, which stands for “Happy Honey Badger,” an animal known for its ferocious fighting abilities that Ma modeled himself after, is a shrine of sorts to the man who put China Inc. on the map. In the lobby were a few copies of “This Is Ma Yun,” a biography written by his personal assistant, and baseball caps emblazoned with a bow-tied feral-looking badger for sale.
But Ma watchers shouldn’t hold their breath. He hasn’t been seen in public since the $35 billion initial public offering of Alibaba-affiliate Ant Group Co., potentially the biggest ever, was called off by authorities in November after he made a speech in late October lashing out at Chinese financial regulators. As of early December, Ma was advised by the government to stay in the country, a person familiar with the matter has said, and late last month regulators opened an anti-monopoly investigation into his business empire. Ma also skipped a recent taping of “Africa’s Business Heroes,” the “Shark Tank”-like TV show he created.
All that is fueling the rumor mill over Ma’s whereabouts, though open speculation has been quashed in China after Beijing ordered domestic media to restrict reporting on the antitrust probe, according to people with direct knowledge of the matter.
An Alibaba spokesperson declined to comment on his location.
The fact that the normally loquacious billionaire hasn’t appeared in public in months is an issue for investors, who deem it an overhang for the languishing stock, said Hao Hong, Chief Strategist at brokerage Bocom International in Hong Kong. Ma’s personal wealth has shrank by as much as $11.7 billion after Alibaba shares dropped more than 20% since the IPO suspension.
“I think he is laying low, as what is to be gained from making another headline?” Hong said.
During a day trip to Hangzhou, a hub for some of the nation’s most innovative private firms about an hour from Shanghai by high-speed rail, Bloomberg interviewed several local residents and visited Alibaba’s headquarters. The prevailing opinion among those willing to talk was that Ma isn’t in personal jeopardy, and that Beijing probably couldn’t afford breaking up the Alibaba empire and putting thousands of small businesses and suppliers at risk.
“We somewhat depend on Ma’s Alibaba for business,” said one taxi driver who declined to be identified. “Whenever I don’t get enough passengers, I drive to Alibaba’s headquarters and there’s always huge demand especially in the afternoons and at night time.”
Attempts to get insiders to talk on the record were as difficult as getting access to locations closely linked to Ma. One former Alibaba employee who still has business ties with the company cut short a discussion, while a current staffer agreed to chat off the record before later demurring, saying it wasn’t “convenient” to talk to foreign media due to the company’s recent strict internal risk controls. The entrance to Alibaba’s campus was tightly guarded, and guards confronted Bloomberg reporters standing outside the property. A sign at the gate of the visitor center showed a few courses were scheduled at its Taobao University, which trains e-commerce merchants. A company spokesman declined a request for a meeting or tour, citing the blackout period ahead of the release of its third-quarter earnings.
Xiong Gao, a 30-year-old who operates a store on Alibaba’s flagship business-to-consumer platform Tmall, was one of the few people willing to speak.
“Teacher Ma is everywhere.” said Xiong, who had just walked out of the sprawling campus after a meeting during a business trip from Guangzhou. “When we open Alipay or Taobao apps, you’ll see all these masterpieces and achievements of Teacher Ma. He has influenced so many people.”
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