The Mercury

Chinese regulatory tightening moves beyond tech companies

- HELMO PREUSS Preuss is an Economist at Forecaster Ecosa

THE announceme­nt by the authoritie­s in Macao on September 14 that there would be a 45-day public consultati­on on gambling in the territory shows that Chinese regulatory tightening has moved beyond internet technology companies to other areas.

The share prices of US casino companies that operate in Macao – the only place where gambling is legal in China – plunged.

The government of the semi-autonomous Chinese territory was considerin­g changes in nine areas, Macao’s economic and financial secretary Lei Wai Nong said. Those areas include the number of gambling licences issued and their duration, a stronger review mechanism for approving operators, and employee welfare.

Investors have already seen some $3 trillion (R44 trillion) wiped off the market value of the country’s biggest tech companies over the government’s tightening of regulation­s that seek to curb monopolist­ic behaviour and promote a better lifestyle for its citizens.

Regulators have cut the amount of time players under 18 can spend on online games to an hour of play on Fridays, weekends and holidays, in response to growing concern over gaming addiction, which some commentato­rs have labelled a “social opium”.

The State Administra­tion of Market Regulation (SAMR), similar to SA’s Competitio­n Commission, said it would further regulate the sharing economy such as ride-, bike- and home-sharing.

China is building its own statebacke­d cloud system – “guo zi yun” – which translates as “state asset cloud”, in direct competitio­n to cloud services offered by Chinese tech giants such as Alibaba, Huawei and Tencent. Many state-controlled entities will then be forced to migrate to the state cloud from the private cloud.

In the same way that subliminal advertisin­g, which are messages that the conscious mind cannot perceive, is banned in most countries, so the Cyberspace Administra­tion of China said that companies must abide by business ethics and principles of fairness and should not set up algorithm models that entice users to spend large amounts of money or spend money in a way that may disrupt public order.

In May, three financial regulators widened curbs on China's cryptocurr­ency sector by barring banks and online payment firms from using cryptocurr­ency for payment or settlement. They also barred institutio­ns from providing exchange services between cryptocurr­encies and fiat currencies, and prohibited fund managers from investing in cryptocurr­encies as assets. Provincial-level government­s then curbed bitcoin mining, which was using large amounts of energy.

The housing ministry and seven other regulators have also sought to “improve order” in the property sector to prevent an asset bubble.

Fitch Ratings said there were legitimate economic and regulatory considerat­ions at play in China’s regulatory crackdown on internet-oriented technology enterprise­s, private education firms and overseas listings, but a blunt policy execution and communicat­ions strategy could alter the regulatory risk premium that global investors require for investing in Chinese securities.

“The government’s policy considerat­ions broadly encompasse­s data privacy, national security, socio-economic considerat­ions, and a recognitio­n that regulatory oversight has not kept abreast with the reach and influence of China’s online sector,” Fitch said.

It noted that many of these regulatory issues are not China-specific, and other government­s have also implemente­d related reforms in recent years.

“China’s new regulation­s will affect the competitiv­e landscape, profitabil­ity and cash generation of companies in the relevant sectors, but we do not believe the changes will have negative spillovers for China’s broader corporate environmen­t,” Fitch added.

With China tightening regulation­s, it may be wise for investors to question whether there could be knockon effects outside China if other regulators follow suit. Global giants elsewhere could well be vulnerable to some form of regulatory sanction.

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