Following controversial comments by the CEO of Meituan about Alibaba founder Jack Ma for โ€œan integrity problem,โ€ the two Chinese internet giants are engaging once again in a public spat, with Alibaba leaders accusing the Meituan executive of defamation.

Meituan CEO Wang Xing told Bloomberg in an interview released Thursday that he still thinks Ma โ€œhas an integrity problem,โ€ referring to the spinoff of Alibaba financial payment subsidiary Alipay without board approval in 2011. With that move, Wang added, Ma inflicted lasting damage to the global reputation of Chinaโ€™s business leaders.

Wang was referring to Maโ€™s separation of the Alipay unit from Alibaba Group in June 2011, which was then transferred to a Chinese company in his control. This immediately prompted fury from major shareholders including Yahoo and Softbank, who complained they were blindsided by the transfer.

The Chinese e-commerce giant, technically a foreign-invested entity, later responded by saying it was necessary to restructure Alipay as a domestic Chinese company, and therefore to be eligible for the payment license application required by the central government. At the time, Chinese regulators required that any payment company without a license had to cease operation by September 2011, WSJ cited Alibaba as saying.

โ€œThey tried to lie about that. They even tried to say the Chinese government forced them to do that. That was wrong,โ€ Wang said in the Bloomberg interview. โ€œI think the impact of that incident is still underestimated.โ€

โ€œPetty and potentially libelous comments from a disgruntled rival neither hurts Alibaba nor alleviates the competition its rival faces,โ€ Wang Shuai, Alibabaโ€™s head of PR said Thursday on microblogging platform Weibo in response to Wangโ€™s remarks.

Meituan has battled Alibaba in its core food delivery business for years, following a short-lived friendship when the Hong Kong-listed life services platform received $50 million in a Series B led by Alibaba and Sequoia in July 2011.  However, Wang has retained control over the company and refused Alibabaโ€™s attempts at acquisition. Alibaba later backed Shanghai-based Ele.me in 2015, after which Meituan received $4 billion in a fundraising round led by Tencent in October 2017.

โ€œWithout approval from two major shareholders, Ma transferred Alibabaโ€™s core asset to a company with his own name at a very low price,โ€ Hu Shuli, founder of Chinaโ€™s top business magazine Caixin, said in June 2011 (our translation). โ€œMa undermined the spirit of a contract, which is the cornerstone of a market economy.โ€

Jill Shen was TechNode's auto tech reporter until August 2025. She currently covers Chinese AI and EV as a freelancer. Connect with her via e-mail: jill_shen_sh@icloud.com or Twitter: @jill_shen_sh

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