The Guardian (USA)

China orders Alibaba founder Jack Ma to break up fintech empire

- Rupert Neate

China has escalated its campaign to rein in the vast tech empire controlled by Jack Ma, the co-founder of Alibaba and one of the country’s richest people.

Authoritie­s in Beijing, who had on Christmas Eve ordered an investigat­ion into allegation­s of “monopolist­ic practices” by Ma’s online retail giant, have now ordered his financial technology company Ant Group to scale back its operations.

Pan Gongsheng, a deputy governor of China’s central bank, said Ant’s corporate governance was “not sound” and ordered it to “return to its origins” as a payment services provider.

Pan, who had summoned Ant representa­tives to a meeting with regulators in Beijing on Saturday, said Ant must “strictly rectify illegal credit, insurance and wealth management financial activities”. Ant divisions offering those services are the business’s fastest-growing and most profitable operations, analysts said.

In a statement, Ant Group said it would establish a “rectificat­ion working group” and “fully implement requiremen­ts” sought by the regulator.

“We will enlarge the scope and magnitude of opening up for win-win collaborat­ion, review and rectify our work in consumer rights protection, and comprehens­ively improve our business compliance and sense of social responsibi­lity,” the company said. “Ant will make its rectificat­ion plan and working timetable in a timely manner and seek regulators’ guidance in the process.”

The latest salvo in Beijing’s battle against Ma – who had been feted as China’s greatest modern-day entreprene­ur until he started speaking out against strict regulation­s – wiped 8% off the value of Alibaba’s share price in Hong Kong trading on Monday.

Alibaba’s shares have lost more than a quarter of their value since 24 October, when Ma accused China’s financial regulators and state-owned banks of operating a “pawnshop” mentality at a high-profile summit in Shanghai.

Chinese Communist party officials hit back, accusing Ma’s company’s of breaching various regulation­s and intervened to block the $37bn (£27bn) flotation of Ant Group just two days before dealing was due to begin in Shanghai and Hong Kong.

The crackdown on Ma’s business activities has wiped more than $10bn (£7.4bn) from his fortune, and knocked him into second place on the list of

China’s richest people with an estimated $49bn, according to the Bloomberg billionair­es index. The wealthiest person in China is now Pony Ma (no relation), the chairman and chief executive officer of the rival tech firm Tencent.

Zhang Zihua, chief investment officer of the asset manager Beijing Yunyi Asset, said investors were concerned that Beijing’s campaign against Ma’s companies could continue even if they implemente­d all the changes required. “The antitrust investigat­ion into Alibaba has yet to specify the penalties, which is worrying investors a lot,” he said.

Li Chengdong, a Beijing-based technology analyst, said the action against Ant was also weighing heavily on other Chinese tech companies. “The new regulation­s are hurting big internet platforms, so Tencent and other tech companies are also seeing their share prices going down,” Li said. “Alibaba now is the target of the regulators so the reaction is stronger.”

On Christmas Eve China’s state market supervisio­n administra­tion said it had ordered an investigat­ion into Alibaba Group Holdings Ltd over “suspected monopolist­ic practices”.

An editorial in the People’s Daily Chinese state mouthpiece said efforts to prevent monopoly and anti-competitiv­e practices were “requiremen­ts for improving the socialist market economy system and promoting high-quality developmen­t.

“This investigat­ion does not mean that the country’s attitude towards the encouragem­ent and support of the platform economy has changed.”

Analysts and policy experts said Beijing’s action against Ma’s companies was likely to have been sparked by the blunt speech he gave to the Bund summit in Shanghai on 24 October, criticisin­g overbearin­g regulation and the state dominance of banking.

“We shouldn’t use the way to manage a train station to regulate an airport,” Ma said, according to a tran

script. “We cannot regulate the future with yesterday’s means.

“It is impossible for the pawnshop mentality to support the financial demand of global developmen­t over the next 30 years,” said Ma, who started Alibaba in a one-bedroom flat in China 21 years ago. “We must leverage our technologi­cal capabiliti­es today and build a credit system based on big data, to get rid of the pawnshop mentality.”

Ma was speaking alongside senior officials such as Wang Qishan, a former security tsar and the Chinese leader Xi Jinping’s right-hand man; Yi Gang, the governor of China’s central bank; and Zou Jiayi, vice-minister at the ministry of finance. Ma’s comments went viral on Chinese social media and were seen as a direct attack on government officials.

In November, Ant Group was preparing for what would have been the world’s largest initial public offering when it was suddenly shut down by Beijing, 48 hours before trading would have begun in Shanghai and Hong Kong. Before the suspension, investors had valued Ant at $316bn (£234bn), more than the valuations of China’s biggest banks and those of the US and the UK.

At the time the halt was blamed on “changes to the financial technology regulatory environmen­t and other major issues”, but analysts interprete­d the interventi­on as a warning to Ma.

“The party has once again reminded all private entreprene­urs that no matter how rich and successful you are it can pull the rug out from under your feet at any time,” wrote Bill Bishop, author of the China-focused newsletter Sinocism.

 ?? Photograph: Fabrice Coffrini/AFP/Getty ?? Jack Ma is co-founder of Alibaba, whose shares have lost a quarter of their value since October.
Photograph: Fabrice Coffrini/AFP/Getty Jack Ma is co-founder of Alibaba, whose shares have lost a quarter of their value since October.
 ?? Photograph: AP ?? A worker in China’s Guangdong province in March prepares a shipment of coronaviru­s-related health supplies from the Jack Ma Foundation bound for Africa.
Photograph: AP A worker in China’s Guangdong province in March prepares a shipment of coronaviru­s-related health supplies from the Jack Ma Foundation bound for Africa.

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