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Beijing struggles to defuse anger over P2P lending crisis

China’s online P2P industry has outstandin­g loans of US$218bil

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BEIJING: Peter Wang was asleep at his home in Beijing last Monday when police officers arrived before dawn to detain him, saying he had helped organise a protest planned for later that day.

Across the city, others who had lost money investing in China’s online peer-topeer (P2P) lending platforms – including some who had travelled from as far away as Shandong and Shanxi provinces – got similar visits from police.

By the time they were released, the demonstrat­ion they had planned using social media chat groups had fizzled amid a massive security response around the China Banking and Insurance Regulatory Commission (CBIRC) headquarte­rs in the heart of Beijing’s financial district.

Instead of demanding that the government bail out the hundreds of collapsed P2P companies, those who made it to the protest area were forced onto buses and carted away to Jiujingzhu­ang, a holding centre for petitioner­s on the outskirts of Beijing, according to two P2P investors.

“Once the police checked your ID cards and saw your petition materials, they knew you are here looking to protect your rights. Then they put you on a bus directly,” said Wang, who works at an auto repair shop.

He joined a separate, smaller protest in a different part of Beijing after his detention.

“There was no channel to solve any problems. All they care about was preventing any disturbanc­e.”

The size of China’s P2P industry is far bigger than in the rest of the world combined, with outstandin­g loans of 1.49 trillion yuan (US$217.96bil), according to data tracker p2p001.com, run by the Shenzhen Qiancheng Internet Finance Research Institute.

P2P, in which platforms gather funds from retail investors and loan the money to small corporate and individual borrowers, promising high returns, started flourishin­g nearly unregulate­d in China in 2011.

At its peak in 2015, there were about 3,500 such businesses.

But after Beijing began a campaign to defuse debt bubbles and reduce risks in the economy, including the country’s enormous non-bank lending sector, cracks began to appear as investors pulled their funds.

Since June, 243 online lending platforms have gone bust, according to wdzj.com, another P2P industry data provider.

In that period, the industry saw its first monthly net fund outflows since at least 2014, the data provider said.

The latest burst of anger, which led to the planned protests, flared up ahead of a June 30 deadline for companies to comply with new business practice standards, which are still being finalised but could include bank custodians­hip of investor funds and tougher disclosure requiremen­ts.

Many of them shut down rather than do so, Zane Wang, chief executive of online micro-loan provider China Rapid Finance, told Reuters.

That caused panic in the broader market. Investors tried to pull funds from P2P companies, causing liquidity problems for many smaller operators, Wang said, although larger ones are faring better.

“Some platforms might become a winner out of this, and some platforms, probably a large portion of the platforms, might not be able to make it,” he said.

 ?? — AFP ?? No protest allowed: Petitioner­s are escorted to a bus by security personnel before being driven away in Beijing last Monday. Hundreds of police swarmed the streets of Beijing’s financial district as Chinese authoritie­s aggressive­ly quashed a planned protest against losses sustained by P2P lending platforms.
— AFP No protest allowed: Petitioner­s are escorted to a bus by security personnel before being driven away in Beijing last Monday. Hundreds of police swarmed the streets of Beijing’s financial district as Chinese authoritie­s aggressive­ly quashed a planned protest against losses sustained by P2P lending platforms.

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