Alibaba's Jack Ma Joins University of Tokyo As Visiting Professor
Alibaba co-founder Jack Ma has joined Tokyo College, which is run by the University of Tokyo.
Ma will be conducting research and teaching about sustainable agriculture and food production.
A former English teacher, Ma has been lying low for two years after he angered regulators in China.
Morning Brew Insider recommends waking up with, a daily newsletter. Loading Something is loading. Thanks for signing up! Access your favorite topics in a personalized feed while you're on the go. download the app Email address By clicking “Sign Up,” you also agree to marketing emails from both Insider and Morning Brew; and you accept Insider’s Terms and Privacy Policy Click here for Morning Brew’s privacy policy.
Alibaba co-founder Jack Ma has taken up a teaching position in Japan, one of the first public roles he has assumed since disappearing from the spotlight in 2020.
In his new role, Ma is expected to conduct research on sustainable agriculture and food production, Tokyo College said in an announcement on Monday.
The tech titan, once China's richest man, will also "share his rich experience and pioneering knowledge on entrepreneurship, corporate management and innovation" in seminars at the college, which is run by the University of Tokyo.
Ma's term as a visiting professor starts on May 1. It marks the 58-year-old's return to teaching after his retirement from Alibaba in September 2019. The billionaire was an English teacher for several years before co-founding Alibaba.
Ma said in May 2019 that he would go back to teaching after retiring from Alibaba in September of the same year. At the time, he said he was returning to his roots because of his love for the profession.
Ma's return to a public-facing role comes more than two years after he angered the Chinese authorities in October 2020 during a speech in which he criticized China's financial regulatory system and claimed Chinese banks were operating with a "pawnshop" mentality.
Days later the $37 billion float of his fintech business, Ant Group, was cancelled.
The cancellation of Ant's IPO triggered a wider crackdown on tech firms in the country.
This pressured Alibaba's share price, which fell by more than 70% from its 2020 peak. Ma's wealth plummeted from a high of $61 billion in October 2020, to an estimated $33 billion, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index.
Since then, Ma — who was once a high-profile jet-setter — has been lying low, spurring intense speculation about his whereabouts.
In November 2022, Ma was spotted in Japan where he socialized mainly within several private members clubs, per the Financial Times. In January, he was spotted in Bangkok, Thailand, where he visited a Michelin-starred street food restaurant and watched a Muay Thai fight. He also popped up in Hong Kong in January.
Ma has been getting more time in the limelight since March when returned to a school he founded in his hometown of Hangzhou in east China. In April, he was appointed an honorary professor at the University of Hong Kong.
Source: Business Insider