Global Times

Tighter regulation looms for online lending

Technology improves efficiency, lowers losses from risks

- By Huang Ge in Bo’ao

With China stepping up efforts to regulate Internet finance, the sector will experience a period of financial innovation and regulated growth, experts said Thursday.

Due to the lack of regulation, risks have emerged in recent years as the sector expanded dramatical­ly in China, Hu Bin, deputy director at the Institute of Finance and Banking of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, told the on- going Boao Forum held in South China’s Hainan Province.

The authoritie­s need to change their regulatory philosophy by enhancing exchanges and interactio­ns with the market, he said.

“An early warning system is also needed to automatica­lly detect and prevent financial risks.”

At the initial stage, China’s peer- to- peer ( P2P) platforms grew swiftly in an unregulate­d environmen­t, but risks in this sector have peaked and the industry needs internal controls, according to Hu. Now, many P2P lenders are seeking to transform their operations, becoming online platforms that help users manage money, Hu said.

“Selling financial products via the Internet is not a problem itself, but the potential risk is that this strategy lowers the access threshold for private equity products, which requires regulation,” he said.

Indeed, after industry regulation­s were enacted in 2016, the prospects for China’s Internet finance sector improved and the market still has great scope for growth in the coming years, Zhang Shishi, CEO of New Finance Group and Cofounder of P2P platform Renrendai, told the Global Times on Thursday.

“The market has become more active as an increasing number of private firms are entering the sector,” he said.

Given the outlook for tough- er regulation­s, domestic online lenders should strive for better data management to enhance their competitiv­eness, Zhang said.

Technology has had a strong impact on the financial sector by improving its operationa­l efficiency and lower the losses caused by risks, experts said.

With the improved developmen­t of the Internet, China has become home to one of the world’s fastest- growing financial technology ( FinTech) sectors.

Fintech improves operationa­l efficiency via using technology such as big data, cloud computing and artificial intelligen­ce, and this will bring qualitativ­e changes to finance, Ma Weihua, former chairman of China Merchants Bank, told a session at the Boao Forum.

Internet finance aims to expand channels and Fintech is the revolution of technology. Fintech can meet the need for traditiona­l financial services based on data, experts said.

But they also warned that potential risks in the Fintech sector should not be neglected, such as informatio­n security.

“We should not be overconfid­ent because many technologi­es need time for verificati­on. The developmen­t of Fintech sector should advance step by step,” noted Gregory Gibb, CEO of Shanghai Lujiazui Internatio­nal Financial Asset Exchange Co.

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