Alibaba Group CEO consolidates control of core businesses with new e-commerce role
Alibaba Group said on Wednesday its chief executive would directly oversee its domestic e-commerce arm, with the unit's previous head turning her focus to managing non-core assets as the group combats slower earnings growth.
Group CEO Eddie Wu will take over as chief executive of domestic e-commerce arm Taobao and Tmall Group effective immediately, the company said, boosting his direct control over the group's core businesses.
Wu, who has been Group CEO since September, also took over from previous head Daniel Zhang as the company's cloud business CEO that month. The latest appointment means Wu now leads the overall group as well as its two most important business divisions - cloud and domestic e-commerce.
Alibaba's Hong Kong-listed shares were trading 3% higher as of 0630 GMT on Wednesday.
The company's domestic e-commerce platforms Tmall and Taobao remain China's largest, but have been losing market share in recent years to fast-rising competitors like PDD Holdings' Pinduoduo.
This year in particular, weak consumer sentiment in China stoked by economic insecurity and a slower-than-expected retail recovery following the lifting of Covid-19 curbs a year ago created what the previous Taobao and Tmall Group CEO Trudy Dai described as a "value for money battle".
Dai will shift roles to assist in the establishment of a new asset management company "as part of ongoing efforts to improve return on capital," according to an internal company letter seen by Reuters and signed by Joseph Tsai, who took over as group chairman from Zhang in September.
Dai, Wu and Tsai are all Alibaba Group's co-founders and long-time lieutenants of former chief Jack Ma.
An Alibaba spokesperson confirmed plans to set up a new asset management company and that Dai would be involved.
In a regulatory filing, Alibaba said the newly established company's focus would be on operating the group's non-core assets.
Wu last month briefed analysts about Alibaba Group's future strategy, saying the company would conduct a review to distinguish between "core" and "non-core" businesses.
"Core businesses are where we will keep our long-term focus, intensively invest resources, pursue R&D, enhance user experience," he said in a post-earnings call.
In the largest restructuring in Alibaba's 24-year history, the company in March was broken up into six units managed by the group as a holding firm.
In May, it announced the cloud unit would be among the first of the divisions to spin-off and go public. That plan was shelved last month, with the company citing uncertainties over US curbs on exports to China of chips used in artificial intelligence applications.