Top executives of Chinese e-commerce and financial giant Alibaba said Thursday that the company is moving toward giving up control of some of its business units in a transition toward becoming a capital operator to optimise the value of its sprawling businesses. Alibaba CEO Daniel Zhang outlined details of a plan announced earlier this week to split Alibaba into six main groups as a prelude toward stock listings of some of its companies. The restructuring marks a new stage in Alibaba's growth after a series of setbacks as regulators cracked down on it and other tech companies. Alibaba, whose headquarters is in the eastern city of Hangzhou, will be in the nature of a holding company that is the controlling shareholder of the business group companies, Zhang said in a conference call. Alibaba's CFO, Toby Xu, said the company would continue to evaluate the strategic importance of group companies after they go public and decide whether or not to retain control. He declined to say when t
Some global players are pushing for a 50-50 equity structure, pointing out that without such a split, most Chinese firms might not want to share their technology at all
The company started deployment and invested about USD 5 million and has the plan to deploy 5,000 km OFC as the next step, according to Business Recorder
TikTok's owners may retain some form of ownership but through a passive structure
A divestiture, which could result in a sale or IPO, is considered a last resort, to be pursued only if the company's existing proposal with national security officials doesn't get approved
BGI Group, one of the world's biggest genetics analysis companies, said on Sunday it never would be involved in human rights abuses after the US government said there was a danger some of its units might contribute to Chinese surveillance. Three BGI units were among Chinese companies added to an entity list last week that limits access to US technology on security or human rights grounds. The Commerce Department cited a risk BGI technology might contribute to surveillance. Activists say Beijing is trying to create a database of genetic information from Muslims and other Chinese minorities. The Chinese government accused Washington on Friday of improperly attacking China's companies. BGI, headquartered in the southern city of Shenzhen, said its services are only for civilian and scientific purposes. The US decision may have been impacted by misinformation and we are willing and able to clarify, BGI Group said in an emailed response to questions. It didn't mention Uyghurs or other .
Refusing to defreeze the accounts and set aside the show-cause notice issued to a Kerala-based loan app company, the High Court of Karnataka has cautioned against such apps owned by Chinese entities and individuals which are used to destabilise India. In a recent judgment, Justice M Nagaprasanna, while rejecting the petition of Inditrade Fincorp Ltd, registered in Kochi, said, "It is in public domain that several borrowers have committed suicide unable to bear the harassments of the representatives of such loan apps. The office-bearers of several of these companies which control and operate such mobile loan apps are said to be entities of China or individuals from China sitting as directors of such mobile loan apps. Therefore, it becomes necessary for an investigation, in the least to be conducted of any such company who would operate such loan apps and has transactions between each other." Refusing to stall the investigation against the company, the HC said, "The investigation woul
The job cuts will also reportedly impact senior employees who have worked for the company for more than 10 years
The U.S. Air Force has told North Dakota leaders that it believes a Chinese company's plans to build a wet corn milling plant near its Grand Forks base poses a significant threat to national security, prompting city officials to say they'll move to stop a project once touted as an economic boon. The Fufeng Group's planned $700 million facility would be 12 miles (19 kilometers) from the Grand Forks Air Force Base, a location that triggered some local concern about potential espionage. Gov. Doug Burgum and U.S. Sens. John Hoeven and Kevin Cramer all Republicans pressed the federal government in July to expedite a review of any security risk. U.S.-China business ties have become strained amid growing tensions between the two countries over security and trade issues, which often overlap. China on Monday criticized U.S. controls on technology exports as a trade violation. Fears over spying have led the U.S. armed forces to prohibited the Chinese-owned app TikTok on military devices, and
A small policy relaxation outside the rubric of Press Note 3 is designed to help global and domestic electronics manufacturing build a local supply chain ecosystem
Amid the rising number of deaths in China due to COVID-19, it has introduced IceBurial technology which covers first-hand info and unique insights about China and the Chinese Communist Party
Comparing India and China's Fortune 500 performance may not be entirely fair, but it offers some thought-provoking facts at a time when India is flaunted as the only decent economic game in town
The delay has been mainly due to the disruptions caused by the Covid-19 pandemic in China
The government on Friday said it has not yet issued a mandatory quality certificate to around 160 Chinese companies for selling toys in India, and the delay is due to the COVID-19 pandemic. From January 2021, India has made it mandatory to get the quality certification mark of 'ISI' from the Bureau of Indian Standards (BIS) for the sale of toys in the country. "Around 160 Chinese toy companies have applied for the BIS quality certification in the last two years. We have not yet issued to them in view of the COVID-19 pandemic," BIS Director General Pramod Kumar Tiwari told reporters. Normally, the BIS quality certification is issued after an inspection of the factories. Due to the pandemic restrictions and health concerns, the BIS officials could not visit China, he said. "Neither they invited us for inspection nor we could visit China because of the pandemic," Tiwari said. In the last two years, Tiwari said the BIS has granted the quality certificate to 29 foreign toy makers, out
The deal resolves a key hurdle for Ant as it seeks to meet requirements from regulators following a crackdown on its business after its record initial public offering was torpedoed in 2020
Dozens of hearses queue outside Beijing crematoria; firms suffer supply snags, demand falls as cases spread
The move signals a hardening of US efforts to prevent China from acquiring advanced technologies
The shipment, worth nearly $15 million, is unlikely to be exported as the packaging of many of the phones was damaged and the devices were switched on to check unique ID numbers, the people said
The move is another regulatory response to big tech companies' use of market dominance and advanced technology to undermine competition
Eligible companies under the PLI scheme say they are unable to meet their production targets because of supply chain challenges