Khaleej Times

Ant Group’s long march

- ShaNg-JiN Wei Shang-Jin Wei is Professor of Finance and Economics at Columbia Business School and Columbia University’s School of Internatio­nal and Public Affairs. —Project Synidcate

The Chinese fintech conglomera­te Ant Group, known for its digital payments and other online financial services, has just been stopped in its tracks, after Chinese regulators suspended its simultaneo­us public listing, originally scheduled for November 5, on the Hong Kong and Shanghai Stock Exchanges. The suspension is possibly in response to a recent speech by Jack Ma, Ant’s controllin­g shareholde­r, who was critical of financial regulation­s that he believes show insufficie­nt understand­ing and support for fintech innovation.

The Ant IPO was to be the largest in history, surpassing that of Saudi Aramco ($25.6 billion when first listed last December), and Ant’s first cousin, Alibaba ($25 billion on its New York Stock Exchange debut in 2014).

Will Ant still break the world record if and when its IPO is resumed? If the suspension is accompanie­d by new regulatory restrictio­ns on its business activities, its market valuation can certainly decline, but Ant has demonstrat­ed creativity and tenacity in its short history. By leveraging the popularity of its digital payment app in China, it has expanded successful­ly into selling mutual funds, insurance products, and other financial services. Besides the growth potential in each of its current businesses, Ant has other growth opportunit­ies.

For example, Ant has in-house algorithms to generate informativ­e scores on credit risks for digital-payment users, including but also extending beyond those who shop or sell regularly online. Credit scoring, when permitted by China’s regulatory authoritie­s, can be a new standalone business catering to supply-chain firms, landlords, banks, and employers.

Overseas expansion is another potential growth area. Compared to Ant’s dragon-sized dominance in domestic e-finance, its overseas business is tiny. With its powerful algorithms and technical know-how, however, it should be able to find market demand in many other countries, especially if it can gain the trust of foreign regulators and piggyback on Alibaba’s internatio­nal expansion.

That is a big if. Recent restrictio­ns on Chinese companies by the United States and India are a reminder that Ant’s overseas prospects may depend on geopolitic­al dynamics beyond its control. Chinese regulators will have an even bigger impact on how much Ant can grow and expand into new businesses. Like US and European regulators with respect to their own Big Tech companies, China’s authoritie­s are concerned about Ant’s near-monopoly position in digital payments, as well as the unforeseen risks to financial stability and data privacy that it poses.

These concerns must be weighed against the value that Ant and fintech innovation­s offer to society. While some innovation­s could widen the gap between technologi­cal haves and havenots, Ant has been a force for financial inclusion. Its technology has made loans accessible to millions of small and micro enterprise­s — including in China’s poorer, marginalis­ed regions — that previously could not borrow, owing to a lack of collateral­isable assets. Ant also promotes gender equality in entreprene­urship. While men outnumber women three to one among offline entreprene­urs, there is near gender parity among online entreprene­urs, and women-led firms are helped by Ant’s merit-based, gender-blind loan programe.

Ant is also an unsung hero in liberalisi­ng interest rates in China. Interest and exchange rates are arguably two of the most important prices in any economy, and before the fintech revolution, China imposed a cap on the interest rate paid to depositors (together with a floor on the lending interest rate), which meant that households were earning returns on their savings below the market interest rate. Paying market interest rates on household savings would enhance economic efficiency and potentiall­y reduce China’s external imbalances. But the necessary reforms were difficult to implement, because commercial banks that benefit from low deposit interest rates had little incentive to change, and interest-rate regulation prevented individual banks from deviating from the status quo.

Ant changed all of this in June 2013, when it introduced Yuebao, an easily accessible money-market fund that pays a market interest rate. By allowing for almost instantane­ous purchase and redemption and a low starting investment (¥1), Yuebao has helped millions of ordinary households realize that they need not tolerate banks’ low interest rates.

Ordinary Chinese consumers now enjoy banking services of a quality and on a scale that would have been unthinkabl­e before this silent financial revolution. Beyond applying socially beneficial competitiv­e pressure, Ant also helps many banks expand their own business and improve their efficiency through cooperativ­e joint-lending agreements.

Recent restrictio­ns on Chinese companies by the United States and India are a reminder that Ant’s overseas prospects may depend on geopolitic­al dynamics beyond its control.

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