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Tencent billionaire founder Pony Ma hails China’s new plan to boost private economy after tech crackdown

  • Just hours after China unveiled an action plan to invigorate its economy, the state broadcaster published an article written by Ma
  • Ma pledges on behalf of the internet industry to fulfil the government’s latest strategies and goals to support private businesses

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Ma Huateng, chairman and CEO of Tencent Holdings, has praised China’s new policy plan to boost the private economy. Photo: Bloomberg
Iris Dengin Shenzhen

Tencent Holdings’ usually low-profile founder and chairman Pony Ma Huateng has sung the praises of the Chinese government’s latest economic guideline, breaking his silence after the gaming and social media empire suffered years of regulatory hostility.

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The 51-year-old billionaire, who rarely makes public statements, was among the first private entrepreneurs in the country to applaud the 31-point action plan published on Wednesday by the Chinese Communist Party and the State Council, offering policy solutions to shore up the private sector.

At 11pm, just hours after the document was unveiled, the official WeChat account of state broadcaster China Central Television posted an article penned by Ma, saying the plan plays an important role in “inspiring and guiding” China’s private economy development.

Ma, who wrote as a representative of Chinese internet platforms without mentioning Tencent, pledged to serve as “connectors, toolboxes and assistants” to Beijing’s plan, pursue high-quality economic development, help expand consumer demand and deepen innovation in traditional industries.

His enthusiastic response comes after Tencent, which was once on track to becoming Asia’s first US$1 trillion company, was bruised by China’s regulatory crackdown on Big Tech firms, which included Alibaba Group Holding, owner of the South China Morning Post.

Tencent’s shares have lost more than half of their value since their peak in early 2021, with over US$500 billion in market value evaporating over the past two years. The Hong Kong-traded stock closed at HK$332.8 on Thursday, roughly flat from the day before.

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Under Beijing’s curbs on the “irrational” expansion of capital, Tencent, which was said to own “half of the rivers and mountains” of China’s tech landscape, had to downsize its sprawling business. It has since divested its stakes in Chinese delivery giant Meituan, as well as e-commerce giant JD.com.

The Tencent headquarters in Shenzhen, China. Photo: Bloomberg
The Tencent headquarters in Shenzhen, China. Photo: Bloomberg
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