Global Times

Third- party payment providers to link with unifi ed platform

- By Yu Xi

The online payment industry in China will become more regulated, with the central bank ordering third- party payment institutio­ns to connect to a newly establishe­d unifi ed platform by June 30 in 2018.

Unifi ed platform refers to an online payment clearing platform for nonbanking payment institutio­ns.

At present, online payments made via third- party payment tools such as Alibaba’s Alipay and Tencent’s WeChat Pay are completed directly between such providers and banks, bypassing the clearing system of the People’s Bank of China ( PBC), the central bank.

This situation has caused some risks for the industry. The PBC can’t supervise illegal activities such as money laundering and illicit money transfers that are conducted through online payments via the third- party payment tools, Wang Pengbo, a fi nance industry analyst from Internet research fi rm Analysys, told the Global Times on Monday.

Also, the leading third- party payment companies leverage their strong fi nancial position to bargain with the banks for lower service fees and other preferenti­al policies. That’s unfair to small third- party payment providers, noted Wang.

As China’s third- party payment market is huge, it requires additional regulation, noted experts. Transactio­ns involving third- party online payments rose 56.1 percent in the fi rst quarter of 2017 year- on- year to 6.4 trillion yuan ($ 0.95 trillion), according to a report iResearch released in July.

The platform will enable the PBC to better supervise capital fl ows via the third- party payment companies, which will help the industry over the long term, Huang Yue, an analyst from Internet service consultanc­y iResearch, told the Global Times on Monday.

Huang noted that data collected by the platform will create more opportunit­ies for profi t.

Consumers won’t notice any diff erence when they make payments in this way, said Wang.

The platform is being jointly founded by 45 shareholde­rs with registered capital of about 2 billion yuan, Caijing magazine reported on Saturday.

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