Ant issues self-disciplinary rules, CEO resigns
Alibaba affiliate and fintech giant Ant Group wants to appease the authorities with self-regulation, but will this be enough to get the government off its back?
The CEO of Chinaโs fintech giant Ant Group resigned today, months after the companyโs IPO was halted amid increased regulatory scrutiny on fintech firms.
Hoping to appease regulatorsโ concerns over the systematic risks created by the fintech company, Ant on Friday also released a set of financial self-discipline rules. This is the first of such rules issued by a fintech company. Under the rules, Ant pledged (in Chinese) to be a โmore responsibleโ fintech platform. The rules include provisions such as:
- Ant will not issue loans to minors, and will limit the loan amount to young people or those with low repayment ability at levels that do not exceed their means.
- The company will prevent small business loans from flowing into the stock and real estate market.
- Ant will also make sure to clarify to financial institutions like micro loan providers the risks of using its credit-rating service โ Zhima Credit โ as a reference for issuing loans.
Antโs leadership team is also getting a shakeup. Founder Jack Ma (้ฉฌไบ Mว Yรบn) has uncharacteristically stayed out of the spotlight for many months, and now its top executive has resigned.
- Simon Hu (่กๆๆ Hรบ Xiวomรญng), resigned from the CEO position of Ant and will move to a position doing philanthropic and social responsibility work both for Ant and Alibaba. Antโs current chairman, Eric Jing (ไบ่ดคๆ Jวng Xรญandรฒng) will take up the CEO position, in addition to his current role.
- Hu reportedly had been heading a team inside Ant to work with regulators to rectify its businesses. Ant is reorganizing the group into a financial holding firm overseen by Chinaโs central bank amid pressure from the financial regulators.
Alibaba is also facing potential antitrust probes as the Chinese government continues to crack down on Jack Maโs business empire.
- Regulators in Beijing are considering issuing a record fine against Alibaba on antitrust charges, the Wall Street Journal reported. In brief, the governmentโs case is that Alibaba, Tencent and other massive Chinese tech companies have been either buying up all their competitors or steamrollering them out of existence.
Alibaba may also have a political problem. Beijing doesnโt want to โcrushโ Alibaba, which is popular both in China and among global investors, according to the Journal, but wants the group to โdisassociate itself from its flashy and outspoken founder and align itself more closely with the Communist Party.โ