Business Standard

New China rules require non-bank companies to apply for licences

Raises scrutiny ahead of Ant IPO

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China is increasing its regulatory scrutiny of non-bank financial companies including Ant Group, the Chinese fintech conglomera­te expected to raise as much as $30 bn in its initial public offering this year, Financial Times reported on Thursday.

According to state media reports China’s

State Council, or cabinet, has approved regulation­s that would introduce licensing procedures for financial holding companies and, potentiall­y, capital requiremen­ts.

The rules stipulate that non-financial enterprise­s with interests in entities in at least two financial segments, and which hold a majority stake or exercise control over those entities, must apply for a licence to establish a financial holding company, according to state news agency Xinhua.

While the full text of the new rules was not released on Thursday, a draft version of related regulation­s published by the People’s Bank of China last year included a requiremen­t that financial holding companies hold levels of capital “commensura­te with the scale of their assets and risk level”.

An employee at one of the companies likely to be affected by the new regulation­s said they were meant to “put a lid on acquisitio­n sprees”.

The rules stipulate that non-financial enterprise­s with interests in entities in at least 2 financial segments, and which hold a majority stake or exercise control over those entities, must apply for a licence to establish a financial holding company

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