Alibaba

Jack Ma, founder and executive chairman of Alibaba Group, at the company's headquarters in Hangzhou, China, in March 2017.
Tony Law—Redux Jack Ma, founder of Alibaba Group, at the company's headquarters in Hangzhou, China, in March 2017.

Alibaba is China’s biggest e-commerce company, with $1 trillion in gross merchandise sales and $72 billion in revenue in 2020. But forays into mobile payments—its service touts 1.3 billion global users—catapulted this Goliath into a major political stakeholder, unnerving China’s top leaders. Friction between Alibaba’s charismatic founder, Jack Ma, and the Chinese government resulted in regulators suddenly nixing the record-breaking $37 billion IPO of Alibaba’s fintech arm, Ant Group, which was subsequently ordered to restructure. In April, Alibaba agreed to pay a fine of $2.8 billion, imposed for breaching antimonopoly rules—a sign, according to some analysts, that both sides are looking to the future.

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