Chinese richest man and the founder of e-commerce giant Alibaba, Jack Ma, has admitted in a US television interview that being so wealthy is actually causing him "great pain".
Ma has seen his fortune balloon
to $19.5 billion after Alibaba's record-breaking $25 billion initial
public offering on the New York Stock Exchange in September, according
to data compiled by Forbes magazine.
On
Tuesday, the company chalked up a new record -- $9.3 billion of sales
conducted through its platforms during Singles Day, its 24-hour shopping
promotion and the world's biggest online retail event. CONTINUE READING...
But
a successful stock listing and vast fortunes have caused him stress, Ma
said in an interview with US business news channel CNBC Tuesday."
"This month I'm not very happy -- I think too much pressure," Ma told the broadcaster.
"Maybe
the stock goes so up, maybe people have high expectations on you, maybe
I think too much about the future and have too many things to worry
about," he said.
Alibaba's share price has been
on a steady uptrend since it debuted in New York two months ago. It
closed at $114.54 on Tuesday, representing a nearly 70 percent gain from
its offer price of $68.
Ma said that people often tell him that being rich "is good" but admitted he found being the wealthiest man in China difficult.
"Yeah,
it is good, but not the richest man in China. It's a great pain because
when you're (the) richest person in the world, everybody (is)
surrounding you for money," Ma said.
He
added that people now looked at him differently when he walked down the
street and added: "spending money is much more difficult than making
money."
His remarks echoed what he told state media in early October when he said being named China's richest man is "meaningless".
"My happiest days were when I used to earn 90 yuan ($15) a month," Ma once told state media.
He
is looking at the possibility to establish a foundation to spend money
"in a business way" and may even compete with US billionaire Bill Gates
in the field of philanthropy.
Ma
was ranked as China's most generous person after he donated a 1.4
percent stake in his firm to set up a charity focused on the
environment, health care and education, according to a survey by wealth
publisher Hurun in late October.
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