Global Times

Pop- ups for online loans likely to be under scrutiny

- By Xiong Xinyi Page Editor: chijingyi@ globaltime­s. com. cn

Pop- up ads that appear in many mobile apps promoting internet loan products are “out of control” and increasing­ly raising debt and privacy concerns among consumers and experts, with some predicting that it could be the next sector to face stricter regulation amid China's growing efforts to rein in problemati­c practices in the internet industry.

Since the beginning of the year, Chinese netizens have been complainin­g with increasing intensity about pop- up ads and promotions appearing in apps promoting internet loans on China's Twitter- like Weibo.

Such pop- ups will surely become regulators' next target, Zhang Yi, CEO of iiMedia Research Institute, told the Global Times on Sunday, adding that misleading users – especially young ones – to borrow too much online and violating users' privacy are the two major issues.

Chinese authoritie­s have already rolled out policies and regulation­s to crack down on problemati­c internet loans, aiming to better regulate the promotion and distributi­on of internet loans among college students and enhance the supervisio­n of banks' internet loans.

The penetratio­n rate of credit products is 86.6 percent among Chinese consumers aged 18 to 29, and 44.5 percent of people that age group have debts, per a research from Nelson Report.

“Chinese regulators have been careful about loan products that could burden the young population with too much debt at too young an age. The main users of such popular apps such as food delivery apps are young consumers, so things can go wrong as a result of campus loan scams,” according to Zhang,

Zhang noted that leaks of personal data are also a serious problem, as internet loan businesses normally make money by reselling consumers' personal informatio­n, and consumers' user experience­s are also affected by such distractin­g and misleading advertisem­ents.

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