The Post

Ant told to reform businesses

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Chinese regulators have ordered Ant Group, the world’s largest financial technology company, to rectify its businesses and comply with regulatory requiremen­ts amid increased scrutiny of antimonopo­ly practices in the country’s internet sector.

The People’s Bank of China, the country’s central bank, summoned Ant executives on Saturday and ordered them to formulate a rectificat­ion plan and an implementa­tion timetable of its business, including its credit, insurance and wealth management services, the regulators

Sunday.

The statement said that Ant Group lacked a sound governance mechanism, defied regulatory compliance requiremen­ts and engaged in regulatory arbitrage. It also said that the company used its market position to exclude rivals and hurt the rights and interests of consumers.

The meeting came after Chinese regulators last month halted Ant’s $37 billion (NZ$52b) stock debut in Shanghai and Hong Kong over regulatory changes, and comes just days after China announced an anti-monopoly investigat­ion of e-commerce giant said in a statement

Alibaba Group, which owns a 33 per cent stake in Ant Group.

The orders from regulators could limit Ant Group’s expansion and throw its lucrative finance businesses into disarray. Ant Group, which started out as a payments services for Alibaba’s e-commerce platform Taobao, has since expanded to offer insurance and investment products to its hundreds of millions of users in mainland China. Jack Ma, the founder of both Alibaba and Ant Group, is one of China’s richest and most prominent entreprene­urs.

Regulators ordered Ant Group to establish a financial holding company and hold sufficient capital. They said that Ant Group should return to its payments origins, enhance transparen­cy around transactio­ns and prohibit unfair competitio­n, while improving corporate governance and ensuring that it complies with regulatory requiremen­ts.

Ant Group said that it would comply with regulatory requiremen­ts and enhance risk management and control, and that a working group would be set up to make the necessary rectificat­ions.

The scrutiny of Ant Group and Alibaba comes as China closely examines the influence of the country’s internet sector.

Last month, China released draft regulation­s to clamp down on anti-competitiv­e practices in the industry, such as signing exclusive agreements with merchants and the use of subsidies to squeeze out competitor­s.

Alibaba and a company spun off by Tencent Holding Ltd. were fined this month for failing to apply for official approval before proceeding with some acquisitio­ns. –

 ??  ?? Jack Ma, founder of Alibaba and Ant Group.
Jack Ma, founder of Alibaba and Ant Group.

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