China Daily

P2P lending growth slows amid new compliance rules

- By JIANG XUEQING jiangxueqi­ng @chinadaily.com.cn

The growth rate of China’s peer-to-peer lending transactio­n volume dropped by nearly half in 2016, as the industry faced reshufflin­g amid a slew of compliance regulation­s.

Last year, the transactio­n volume of P2P lending nationwide, which involves small businesses or individual­s borrowing money from online investors, exceeded 2.8 trillion yuan ($403 billion), increasing by 138 percent from a year earlier. But the growth slowed down to slightly more than half of the growth rate in 2014 and 2015, according to a report by P2P001, a Shenzhen-based financial web portal, on Monday.

Industry experts said P2P lending companies have moved slowly toward enabling compliance regulation­s, fighting against what they see as challenges including the watchdog encouragin­g banks to provide custodian services for investor funds used for platform transactio­ns. The China Banking Regulatory Commission and three other central government department­s jointly issued interim measures for the administra­tion of the business activities of P2P lenders on Aug 24 last year.

According to the interim measures, P2P lending companies should select qualified banking institutio­ns as their fund custodians. As of the end of 2016, 184 P2P lenders, or 7.98 percent of 2,307 P2P lenders that were running without severe financial problems, launched a fund custody mechanism, which they establishe­d directly with commercial banks. Another 122 such companies signed a fund custody agreement with banks but had not yet launched the mechanism, the report said.

The CBRC also required P2P lending informatio­n intermedia­ries to be authorized to provide telecoms services, but only 424 companies held relevant certificat­es.

Deng Jianpeng, vice-president of the Chinese Internet Financial Innovation Research Institute, said: “The current regulation­s increased the operating costs of P2P lending platforms. A large number of them will possibly vanish in the next two or three years.

The platforms that demonstrat­ed relatively higher compliance with standards will be on sale, and those showing low compliance will be forced to close.”

Wang Shi, chairman of Hepai Online, a Shenzhenba­sed P2P lending company, said: “The P2P lending industry is undergoing a restructur­ing and will see the establishm­ent of a preliminar­y structure in 2017.”

He expected to see the withdrawal of many P2P lenders from March to June and a decrease in the monthly transactio­n volume after August.

Yin Zhentao, secretaryg­eneral of the Research Center for Financial Law and Regulation under the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, said: “The continuous launching of internet financial policies will put the internet finance industry on the right track. There will be a transition to standard-compliant growth.”

As of the end of 2016, the total loan balance of P2P lending companies hit a record high of 1.21 trillion yuan, increasing by 115.9 percent from the end of 2015.

The P2P lending industry is undergoing a restructur­ing and will see the establishm­ent of a preliminar­y structure in 2017.” Wang Shi, chairman of Hepai Online

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