
Jack Ma is on a study tour of agriculture in Europe as Alibaba’s founder travels abroad for the first time in more than a year
- Ma, who retired as Alibaba’s chairman on his 55th birthday, is in Spain for a study tour, according to a person familiar with his itinerary
- Before flying to Europe, Ma was in Hong Kong to spend low-key “private time” with his family, said the source who declined to be named
Alibaba founder Jack Ma is in Europe for a series of business meetings, the Post has learned, the first overseas trip in more than a year for the entrepreneur who spent one of every three days travelling in 2018.
Before flying to Europe, Ma was in Hong Kong to spend low-key “private time” with his family, the source said.
Alibaba spokesmen contacted by the Post declined to comment on Ma’s trip, noting that he had not been involved in the company’s daily operations since his retirement in September 2019.
Still, Ma’s trip to Hong Kong marked a significant development for Alibaba, whose globe-trotting co-founder was also the company’s most active ambassador and evangelist for the merits of e-commerce and globalisation. The Hangzhou-based company was under scrutiny by China’s antitrust regulators for almost a year, and was slapped with a record 18.2 billion yuan (US$2.8 billion) penalty in April for monopolistic behaviour.

Alibaba’s stock, down 35 per cent in New York and Hong Kong since December 2020, has risen 20 per cent since late September amid optimism that the Chinese government’s scrutiny of the company’s business practices is drawing to an end.
“More and more Chinese enterprises have stepped forward to invest in science and technology” to address the “choke points of technology”, the newspaper said in a post on China’s microblogging site Weibo. “In the Long March towards technology self sufficiency, we hope more Chinese businesses and social organisations can join the great course of innovation.”
Ma could not be reached for comment. “He’s lying low right now,” said Joe Tsai, Alibaba’s co-founder and chairman of SCMP Publishers, during a June 15 interview with CNBC, adding that his business partner spends most of his time painting. “I talk to him every day.”
