Business Standard

Chinese state firms to take big stake in Ant credit JV

Move may help revive IPO

- JULIE ZHU Hong Kong, 1 September

State-backed firms are set to take their first sizeable stake in a key Ant Group asset as part of the Chinese fintech giant's regulatory­driven revamp that was ordered after its botched November stock market debut, three people told Reuters.

The partners plan to establish a personal credit-scoring firm to handle Ant's treasure trove of data on over 1 billion consumers, said the people, adding that its ownership structure could help revive Ant's blockbuste­r initial public offering (IPO) which regulators put a stop to with just two days to go.

The IPO drew regulators' attention to billionair­e Jack Ma's Ant and e-commerce affiliate Alibaba Group Holding Ltd . The result was a restructur­ing order for Ant, a record $2.75 billion fine for Alibaba for antitrust violations, and a near-three month disappeara­nce of Ma from public view.

Under the plan, Ant and Zhejiang Tourism Investment Group Co

Ltd will each own 35 per cent of the venture, while other statebacke­d partners include Hangzhou

Finance and Investment Group and Zhejiang Electronic Port, said one of the people.

The only non-state investor will be Transfar Group said the people with knowledge of the matter, who declined to be identified as the informatio­n was private. Transfar's stake will total 7 per cent, said one of the people.

The plan would represent one of the most prominent outcomes of a government push for state-backed firms to exert more control and influence over fast-growing but previously lightly regulated new-economy businesses.

It follows the PBOC in April ordering Ant to become a more strictly regulated financial holding firm, break its "monopoly on informatio­n and strictly comply with the requiremen­ts of credit informatio­n business regulation." In June, Ant won operationa­l approval for a consumer finance venture whose minority shareholde­rs include state-owned firms.

The venture puts Ant's lucrative microlendi­ng businesses under tighter regulatory purview.

The plan would represent one of the most prominent outcomes of a govt push for statebacke­d firms to exert more control and influence

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