有
孙正义和软银如今仍占有阿里24%的股份。
2000年,孙正义与马云在北京聊了6分钟,便决定投资2000万美元,帮缺钱的阿里巴巴活了下来。
2004年,孙正义再投6000万美元,拥有了阿里约30%的股份。
2014年阿里在美股上市,软银的收益据称达到2900倍。今天,他们仍是阿里的最大股东,占股约24%。
除了阿里,软银和旗下愿景基金的投资版图,遍布中国互联网的每一个角落,字节跳动、滴滴、拼多多、京东物流、饿了么、贝壳、瓜子、Keep、作业帮等明星公司背后,都有他们的身影。
Yes
Masayoshi Son and SoftBank still own 24% of Alibaba.
In 2000, Masayoshi Son and Jack Ma talked for 6 minutes in Beijing and decided to invest 20 million US dollars to help Alibaba, which was short of money, survive.
In 2004, Masayoshi Son invested another 60 million US dollars and owned about 30% of Alibaba.
In 2014, Alibaba went public on the US stock market, and SoftBank's earnings were said to have reached 2,900 times. Today, they are still the largest shareholder of Alibaba, holding about 24% of the shares.
In addition to Alibaba, SoftBank and its Vision Fund's investment map covers every corner of China's Internet. They are behind star companies such as ByteDance, Didi, Pinduoduo, JD Logistics, Ele.me, Beike, Guazi, Keep, and Zuoyebang.
Masayoshi Son holds shares in Alibaba Pictures, but the specific shareholding ratio is not clear. Alibaba Pictures was listed in Hong Kong in 2016. Masayoshi Son is one of its founders and one of the company's major investors, so it can be inferred that he holds a certain number of shares in Alibaba Pictures. In addition, Masayoshi Son is also the founder and chairman of Alibaba Group, and Alibaba Pictures is one of the subsidiaries of Alibaba Group, so his shareholding in Alibaba Pictures is closely related to his position in Alibaba Group.
Some
The largest shareholder of Alibaba in Japan is SoftBank Group. Masayoshi Son is the chairman of SoftBank Group. He personally does not hold Alibaba shares, and Jack Ma is still the largest individual shareholder of Alibaba.
We can see from Alibaba's equity structure that Japan's SoftBank Group holds 28.8% of Alibaba shares and is its largest shareholder. Alibaba's second largest shareholder is Yahoo of the United States, holding 14.8% of the shares, and Jack Ma holds only 7.8% of the shares. However, although SoftBank Group and Yahoo are the two largest shareholders of Alibaba, they have no decision-making power in the company, only dividends.