The Star Late Edition

China is reining in Jack Ma’s Ant Group with an enforced revamp

- TONY MUNROE | Reuters

CHINA has imposed a sweeping restructur­ing on Jack Ma’s Ant Group, the fintech group whose record $37 billion (R540bn) IPO was derailed by regulators in November, underscori­ng Beijing’s determinat­ion to rein in its internet giants.

The overhaul, which has been in the works for several months, includes Ant turning into a financial holding firm, a move expected to curb its profitabil­ity and valuation. It comes two days after e-commerce giant, the Alibaba Group, of which Ant is an affiliate, was hit with a record $2.75bn antitrust penalty as China tightens controls on the “platform economy”.

The restructur­ing, directed by China's central bank, means Ant will be subject to tougher regulatory oversight and capital requiremen­ts, likely cutting its valuation from the tech-style pricing of $315bn it had secured in the run-up to last year's foiled IPO.

However, the measures do not call for the break-up of Ant, whose business span payments, wealth management and consumer lending. Its AliPay app has more than 730 million monthly users in China and handles more transactio­ns a year than Mastercard and Visa. “Ant Group attaches great importance to the seriousnes­s of the rectificat­ion,” the group said in a statement.

As part of the restructur­ing, Ant said it would set up a personal credit reporting company, which will comply with relevant laws and strengthen the protection of personal informatio­n, and effectivel­y prevent the abuse of data. Ant would apply for a licence for the credit reporting company, it said.

“The restructur­ing plan is stricter than expected,” said Dong Ximiao, a chief analyst at Zhonggguan­cun Internet Finance Institute, who said Ant would need at least 200 billion yuan (R445bn) in registered capital to comply with the capital adequacy rule for financial holding companies.

“There’s less uncertaint­y now as the restructur­ing plan finally lands, but we still need to wait and see how Ant implement all those requiremen­ts during the process.”

Reuters reported in February that Ant planned to spin off its consumer-credit data operations, as hiving off the treasure trove of data on more than one billion people was a key part of its business overhaul in response to the regulatory crackdown.

Ant, which began as Alibaba's payments arm, sits on an enormous cache of consumer data. That is the backbone of China’s internet platforms, with companies offering financial products from consumer loans to investment products via smartphone­s.

Ant's revamp comes against a backdrop of uncertaint­y over Ma’s empire that has extended to the billionair­e himself. He finally emerged in public in January, ending months of speculatio­n over his whereabout­s.

The People's Bank of China said that under a “comprehens­ive and feasible restructur­ing plan”, Ant would cut the “improper” linkage between payments service AliPay, virtual credit card business Jiebei and consumer loan unit Huabei.

The central bank also asked Ant to break its “monopoly on informatio­n and strictly comply with the requiremen­ts of credit informatio­n business regulation”.

The company agreed to improve corporate governance and to resolve activity in its credit, insurance and wealth management units that had breached rules, the central bank said.

The central bank said it had also asked Ant to control its leverage and product risks, and control the liquidity risk of its flagship fund products and to actively lower the size of its massive Yu’eBao money market fund.

 ??  ?? CHINA has imposed a sweeping restructur­ing order on Jack Ma’s Ant Group, the fintech group whose record $37 billion (R540bn) IPO was derailed by regulators in November, underscori­ng Beijing’s determinat­ion to rein in its internet giants. | Reuters
CHINA has imposed a sweeping restructur­ing order on Jack Ma’s Ant Group, the fintech group whose record $37 billion (R540bn) IPO was derailed by regulators in November, underscori­ng Beijing’s determinat­ion to rein in its internet giants. | Reuters

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