China Daily (Hong Kong)

Payment company steps up efforts in technology R&D

- By HE WEI in Shanghai hewei@chinadaily.com.cn

Huifu Payment Ltd, the mainland’s leading independen­t payment firm, is sharpening its focus on technologi­cal research and developmen­t as regulators have tightened scrutiny on the sector by establishi­ng unified payment channels and imposing penalties on financial misdeeds.

“In the future, payment firms should refocus on their core businesses and leverage novel technologi­es to unlock new payment scenarios,” said Mu Haijie, president of Huifu.

Shanghai-based Huifu was among the first group of online payment companies — including Ant Financial Services Group, which owns Alipay, and WeChat operator Tencent Holdings Ltd — to receive a third-party digital payment certificat­e from China’s central bank in 2011.

But unlike the household duo who focused primarily on individual users, Huifu prioritize­d the business end, providing payment services to 5.8 million micro and small merchants and offering them a suite of financial technology solutions, including account management services and data analytics.

“We are serving smallersca­le merchants who do not want to be included on platforms that are owned or controlled by large e-commerce groups or financial institutio­ns,” she said.

After floating shares in Hong Kong in June, the company expected its net income to surge 70 percent in the first half of 2018 compared with a year ago. Meanwhile, transactio­n volume surpassed 840 billion yuan ($122.2 billion) from January to July, up 80 percent year-on-year.

It is also looking to diversify new verticals from its traditiona­l stronghold in airline ticket sales to a wider range of industries covering healthcare, logistics and education, Mu said.

“Applicatio­n scenarios are important to the developmen­t of the payment sector, and also a strength for payment firms over traditiona­l financial institutio­ns,” said Qu Xiangjun, a global senior partner at McKinsey & Co.

Huifu has employed big data analytics technology to detect abnormal transactio­ns, identify high-risk merchants and generate real-time business intelligen­ce reports, through a system dubbed “Ask Me” that is tailored to internet-based loan services.

It is also applying artificial intelligen­ce in its proprietar­y biometrics authentica­tion technology to improve risk management, operating efficiency and client experience.

Data from consultanc­y Frost & Sullivan suggested Huifu ranked top among independen­t third-party payment firms in the market segment for micro and small merchants, with a market share of 5.5 percent.

China’s third-party payment market is expected to hit 470.1 trillion yuan in 2021 from 152.9 trillion yuan last year, according to the consultanc­y. Meanwhile, financial regulators have stepped up pressure on third-party payments providers to curb risks.

The People’s Bank of China has handed more than 25 payments companies at least 30 penalties worth a total of 46 million yuan since the outset of 2018, citing breaches in relation to customer rights, product advertisin­g and protection of personal informatio­n.

“In this context, the future game changer for payment firms is technologi­cal prowess. Those who have indigenous technologi­es and applicatio­ns can empower financial institutio­ns and merchants alike and thrive in the long run,” Qu said.

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