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Factbox-Chinese firms and their founders at Xi's symposium
Sri Lankan President Dissanayake visits China · Reuters

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BEIJING (Reuters) - Chinese President Xi Jinping addressed more than a dozen founders and chief executives from some of China's largest companies on Monday, in a bid to boost private sector sentiment.

Here are details of some of the firms, and their heads, in attendance:

ALIBABA - JACK MA

The appearance of Ma, co-founder of Alibaba and one of China's best-known entrepreneurs is seen to be highly symbolic as he largely withdrew from public life after authorities halted the IPO of his fintech company Ant in 2020. Ma gave up control of Ant in 2023.

Alibaba, China's largest e-commerce firm with businesses in cloud computing and AI, was one of Beijing's biggest targets in its private sector crackdown, being fined a record $2.75 billion for anti-monopoly violations in 2021.

Alibaba has since undergone a major corporate restructuring and leadership changes and faces intense competition from rivals such as Pinduoduo.

HUAWEI - REN ZHENGFEI

Huawei became a poster child of China's efforts to beat back U.S. pressure after it defied rounds of Washington's sanctions to release a high-end smartphone powered by a domestically-made chip in 2023.

Washington accuses it of posing a national security risk, which Huawei denies. The company's businesses also span areas from telecoms to connected car software.

XIAOMI - LEI JUN

The world's third-largest smartphone maker, moved into car making last year, with the launch of its SU7 electric sports car.

Founder Lei Jun has been front and center of the shift, with regularly regular livestreams to promote its cars on social media platforms. Xiaomi achieved a technological breakthrough by developing China’s first 3nm smartphone chip, a government official said in October.

DEEPSEEK - LIANG WENFENG

The Chinese AI startup attracted global attention and triggered a market crash in January after launching AI models it says are on par with, or better than, industry-leading models in the United States at a fraction of the cost.

Founded by Liang, its products have been widely embraced not only globally but by Chinese industry, including tech giants such as Tencent and Baidu, though several overseas governments abroad are checking its security risks.

BYD - WANG CHUANFU

Originally set up as a maker of mobile phone batteries, BYD has grown to become China's top electric vehicle maker, selling more than 420 million EVs and plug-in hybrids last year.

CATL - ROBIN ZENG

CATL, the world's largest battery maker, supplies firms such as Mercedes-Benz, BMW and Volkswagen. It is now trying to reinvent itself as a green-energy provider.