Arab Times

China seizes $1.5 billion in online lending crackdown

Police say some lenders and investment vehicles were brazenly fraudulent

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BEIJING, Feb 18, (AP): Chinese police have investigat­ed 380 online lenders and frozen $1.5 billion in assets following an avalanche of scandals in the huge but lightly regulated industry, the government announced Monday.

Beijing allowed a private finance industry to flourish in order to supply credit to entreprene­urs and households that aren’t served by the staterun banking system. But that threatens to become a liability for the ruling Communist Party after bankruptci­es and fraud cases prompted protests and complaints of official indifferen­ce to small investors.

The police ministry said it launched the investigat­ion because person-toperson, or P2P, lending was increasing­ly risky and rife with complaints about fraud, mismanagem­ent and waste.

The ministry gave no details of arrests but said more than 100 executives were being sought by investigat­ors and some had fled abroad. It said authoritie­s seized or froze 10 billion yuan ($1.5 billion) but gave no indication how much might be returned to depositors.

Police say some lenders and investment vehicles were brazenly fraudulent, while others collapsed after inexperien­ced founders failed to manage risk. Monday’s statement said P2P lenders were investigat­ed for complaints including wasting money, reporting phony investment plans and using illegal tactics to raise money.

Lending through online platforms grew by triple digits annually until 2017 when regulators tightened controls.

Depositors lent 1.9 trillion yuan ($280 billion) last year, but that was down by 50 percent from 2017, according to the Shenzhen Qiancheng Internet Finance Research Institute.

The outstandin­g loan balance stood at 1.2 trillion yuan ($177 billion) at the end of 2018, down 25 percent from a year earlier, according to Diyi Wangdai, a web site that reports on the industry.

P2P lenders are part of a privately run Chinese finance industry the national bank regulator estimated in 2015 had grown to $1.5 trillion.

The internet has helped financial platforms attract money from financial novices with little knowledge of the risks involved.

Many lend to factories and retailers or invest in restaurant­s, car washes and other businesses. But inexperien­ce and poor risk control means a downturn in business conditions can bankrupt them.

Finance as a whole has come under tougher scrutiny after a 2015 plunge in stock prices led to accusation­s of insider trading and other offenses.

In one of China’s biggest financial scams, authoritie­s say depositors lost 50 billion yuan ($7.7 billion) in online lender Ezubo before it was seized by regulators in 2015.

The founder and his brother were sentenced to life in prison in 2017.

 ?? (AP) ?? In this file photo, a guide stands next to a model of the West Sea Barrage in Nampo, North Korea. North Korea is exploring two ambitious alternativ­e energy sources, tidal power and the production of coal-based synthetic fuels, that could greatly improve its standard of living while reducing its reliance on oil imports and vulnerabil­ity to sanctions.
(AP) In this file photo, a guide stands next to a model of the West Sea Barrage in Nampo, North Korea. North Korea is exploring two ambitious alternativ­e energy sources, tidal power and the production of coal-based synthetic fuels, that could greatly improve its standard of living while reducing its reliance on oil imports and vulnerabil­ity to sanctions.

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