Chinese authorities are targeting the business interests of Jack Ma, once the country's richest person | Imagem: © Reuters
China'a alternative lenders fill gaps left by Ant

China'a alternative lenders fill gaps left by Ant

Regulatory clampdown allows challengers to flourish but borrowers are paying more

China's crackdown on Jack Ma's Ant Group is boosting rival lenders that charge much higher interest rates, raising fears that Beijing's drive to lower credit risk could spur a wave of defaults.

The online lending unit of Ant has been forced to rein in its business since President Xi Jinping ordered regulators to scrap its $37bn initial public offering and tighten supervision of the company.

Ant, whose Alipay app is China's biggest payments platform, has been a significant operator in the country's booming online credit market. Its internet lending business served 500m customers in the 12 months to June, while the outstanding consumer loans enabled by Ant's platform reached Rmb2.2tn ($339bn) as of the same month.

But as the company has come under pressure, Chinese borrowers have turned to alternative lending platforms, many of which charge higher interest rates because they lack Ant's economies of scale and have less sophisticated systems to identify and manage risk.

"Consumer credit risks have intensified following the pandemic," said Dan Wang, chief China economist for Hang Seng Bank in Hong Kong. "The problem is especially pronounced for young and low-income borrowers."

Six online lending platforms told the Financial Times they had experienced an increase in business in the wake of the pulling of Ant's IPO. A business development manager at Jiedai Dawang, a lender in Chongqing, said its loan applications surged by almost a third in January.

"Ant is shrinking its lending operation because of policy pressure," said the executive at Jiedai Dawang, whose name translates as Credit King. "We don't have this issue and can grow our business freely."

The FT calculated that more than a dozen popular lending platforms charged 25-35 per cent in annualised interest, compared with less than 20 per cent for Ant. Jiedai Dawang charges up to 36 per cent in annualised borrowing fees. "Borrowers will be more likely to default when they pay 25 per cent interest to a small lender than 18 per cent to Ant," said Bo Zhuang, an economist at TS Lombard, a UK-based consultancy.

Credit lines provided by Huabei, Ant's credit card service, and Jiebei, its consumer loan business, have been sharply reduced for many borrowers since the end of last year. Haley Zhang, a Shanghai-based marketing assistant, began taking credit from LexinFintech, an online lending platform that charges interest of more than 20 per cent, after Ant cut her borrowing limit from Rmb6,000 to less than Rmb3,000 in December. "If I can't borrow from Ant, I'll go somewhere else," said Zhang

Guo Shuqing, China's top banking regulator and head of a powerful Chinese Communist party committee that supervises the country's central bank, warned in December that online finance was a "winner-take-all industry" in which large tech companies "hinder fair competition and seek excessive profits". But Ant's economies of scale also reduced consumers' interest costs at a time when the People's Bank of China has warned about increasing household debt, which has surged over recent years to more than 60 per cent of gross domestic product.

The PBoC has warned that China should not rely on online lending to drive consumption, which has been lagging behind despite the economy's sharp rebound from coronavirus. Ant issued about one-tenth of all of China's non-mortgage consumer loans last year.

As part of a government-ordered reorganisation of Ant, its consumer lending unit will be placed in a new financial holding company and regulated by China's central bank, more like a traditional lender. Analysts predict that this will severely hit Ant's growth and valuation. Over the weekend, China's banking regulator tightened rules governing how online lending platforms fund their loans, a move that analysts say could hit the valuation of Ant.

Under the rule changes by the China Banking and Insurance Regulatory Commission, online lending platforms will have to contribute 30 per cent of the funding for loans they offer in partnership with banks. The CBIRC will also cap how much capital commercial banks can commit to online lending in co-operation with tech platforms.

The new rules will come into force next year. The crackdown on Ant comes as Chinese authorities target the business interests of Ma, once the country's richest person. The billionaire, who also founded ecommerce group Alibaba, has largely disappeared from public view since criticising China's regulators and banks in a speech in October.

Much of Ant's lending came from partner banks rather than its own balance sheet, and the company used hightech algorithms to match borrowers with banking partners. Those capabilities allowed Ant to keep lending rates relatively low, while its competitors have to charge higher fees as they are less able to accurately price risk. The expansion of small lenders has also been facilitated by large, stateowned banks' failure to meet demand for consumer credit, with many instead focusing on big corporate clients.

"It is natural for risk-averse banks to turn down subprime borrowers," said Huang Dazhi, a researcher at Suning Institute of Finance. "But the demand is there and someone needs to fill it."

Additional reporting by Primrose Riordan


Financial Times