
The move comes as China tightens scrutiny on its tech sector, including JD.Com and rival Alibaba Group Holding, as part of President Xi Jinping’s “common prosperity” drive to ease inequality in the world’s second-largest economy.
Liu will give away Class B ordinary JD shares, the company disclosed in a filing, without specifying the third-party foundation receiving the donation.
Other big Chinese tech leaders who have ramped up charitable donations amid the government crackdown include ByteDance founder Zhang Yiming, who pledged 500 million yuan (US$78.61 million) to the Chinese city of Longyan for education.
According to a filing in June last year, food delivery giant Meituan’s founder and chief executive Wang Xing said he would donate shares worth about US$2.27 billion to his personal charity.
In April 2021, tech giant Tencent said it would invest 50 billion yuan in environmental and social initiatives amid regulatory scrutiny from antitrust regulators.