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China Continues To Dominate Global FINTECH Industry

https://www.techinasia.com/ant-financial-invests-philippines-mynt
Jack Ma’s Ant Financial makes first investment in the Philippines
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Taguig City in the Philippines. Photo credit: Achim Voss.

Just over three months after Ant Financial first made a move into Southeast Asia with an investment in Thailand, the Chinese web giant has taken a stake in a fintech company in the Philippines.

The deal, for an undisclosed amount, sees Ant Financial, maker of China’s biggest mobile wallet app, take a “substantial minority interest” in Globe Telecom’s Mynt, the companies jointly announced this evening.

See: Jack Ma’s Ant Financial pushes into US with $880m Moneygram acquisition

More cash to go cashless

Mynt, with three million registered users in the nation, runs Gcash, an online service which – not dissimilar to Alipay – allows people to add phone credit, pay bills, send money, make donations, shop online, and purchase goods without the need for cash. It also operates Fuse Lending, which offers personal and business loans.

This is the first ever investment in the Philippines for Ant Financial, a spin-off from Jack Ma’s Alibaba empire.

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Photo credit: Alibaba.

Worth an estimated US$60 billion, Ant Financial is rumored to be plotting an IPO sometime this year.

Ant Financial wants to work with Mynt “to provide simple, secure, low-cost, and accessible digital financial services to unserved and underserved individuals and small and micro enterprises in the Philippines,” said Ant CEO Eric Jing in a statement.

Philippines-based Ayala Corporation also took a minority stake in Mynt alongside the Ant deal.

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Ant Financial, a FinTech giant worth $100+ billion if listed today.

Its smaller competitors such as Qudian, Lufax, Zhongan etc are also worth tens of billions of $s.

Then there are China Finance Online, Jimubox, JD Finance, PaiPaidai,......:-)
 
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Ant Financial, a FinTech giant worth $100+ billion if listed today.

Its smaller competitors such as Qudian, Lufax, Zhongan etc are also worth tens of billions of $s.

Then there are China Finance Online, Jimubox, JD Finance, PaiPaidai,......:-)

On fin-tech, China is in its own league. No match.

While maintaining parity with the developed world on traditional industries, China is achieving leadership in frontier industries, such as fin-tech, IA, EV, and nanotech.

https://www.techinasia.com/ant-financial-invests-philippines-mynt
Jack Ma’s Ant Financial makes first investment in the Philippines
Manila-Philippines-smartphone-market-photo-1.jpg

Taguig City in the Philippines. Photo credit: Achim Voss.

Just over three months after Ant Financial first made a move into Southeast Asia with an investment in Thailand, the Chinese web giant has taken a stake in a fintech company in the Philippines.

The deal, for an undisclosed amount, sees Ant Financial, maker of China’s biggest mobile wallet app, take a “substantial minority interest” in Globe Telecom’s Mynt, the companies jointly announced this evening.

See: Jack Ma’s Ant Financial pushes into US with $880m Moneygram acquisition

More cash to go cashless

Mynt, with three million registered users in the nation, runs Gcash, an online service which – not dissimilar to Alipay – allows people to add phone credit, pay bills, send money, make donations, shop online, and purchase goods without the need for cash. It also operates Fuse Lending, which offers personal and business loans.

This is the first ever investment in the Philippines for Ant Financial, a spin-off from Jack Ma’s Alibaba empire.

Screenshot-54.png

Photo credit: Alibaba.

Worth an estimated US$60 billion, Ant Financial is rumored to be plotting an IPO sometime this year.

Ant Financial wants to work with Mynt “to provide simple, secure, low-cost, and accessible digital financial services to unserved and underserved individuals and small and micro enterprises in the Philippines,” said Ant CEO Eric Jing in a statement.

Philippines-based Ayala Corporation also took a minority stake in Mynt alongside the Ant deal.

View attachment 377940

Making friends with China and contributing to the emerging regional peace and development discourse eventually pays off.

Creating anti-theses for US-led model.
 
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http://www.reuters.com/article/ant-financial-kakao-idUSL4N1G54BR
China's Ant to invest $200 mln in Korea's Kakao Pay amid global push

* Kakao operates messaging platform, payment system
* Ant valued at $60 bln, planning IPO (Adds analyst comment, details on Ant overseas push)

By Adam Jourdan

2017-02-09T050553Z_1_LYNXMPED1806M_RTROPTP_3_ANT-FINANCIAL-STRATEGY_original.jpg

SHANGHAI, Feb 21 China's Ant Financial will invest $200 million in Kakao Pay, the mobile payment subsidiary of South Korean messaging platform giant Kakao Corp, extending a major push by the Chinese firm to create a global network of financial assets.

The two firms said in a joint statement on Tuesday that the investment was part of a larger strategic partnership to help connect Ant's 450 million global users with Kakao Pay, which currently has over 14 million members on its platform.

Ant, valued at $60 billion during a $4.5 billion fundraising round last April, has been using its financial firepower to expand at home and overseas as it prepares for an initial public offering that could be later this year.

The firm, the payment affiliate of Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba Group Holding Ltd, announced an $880 million deal for U.S. money-transfer firm MoneyGram International last month.

Ant also has investments in Indian mobile payment and e-commerce website Paytm and Thai financial technology firm Ascend Money. It plans to expand in the Philippines with a stake in Globe Telecom Inc's fintech firm Mynt.

"South Korea is an important market for Ant Financial in its global expansion, and we see many opportunities in the market for innovative services and growth in mobile payments," said Douglas Feagin, president of Ant Financial International.

Ant, the world's most valuable online finance company, dominates the online payments industry in China with its Alipay platform, but has been facing growing competition from domestic rival Tencent Holdings Ltd's Wechat Pay.

Ant is currently looking to raise as much as $3 billion in debt to fund acquisitions and further foreign investments, a person with direct knowledge of the matter told Reuters earlier this month.

"Ant's ultimate goal is to become a global payments monster- the biggest, broadest option for consumers," said Ben Cavender, Shanghai-based principal for China Market Research.

"The challenge is facing strong local players around the world, so it's cheaper to buy into these companies rather than burning money to steal market share from them."

Kakao, best known for its online messaging platform KakaoTalk, has in total over 48 million users. Its Kakao Pay unit is a financial services platform which offers services such as bill payment and remittance.

(Reporting by Adam Jourdan; Editing by Stephen Coates)
 
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China primed to push advances in blockchain

Financial services, particularly digital currency, payment processing, and market trading and settlement leading blockchain usage

PUBLISHED : Sunday, 26 February, 2017, 7:53pm
UPDATED : Sunday, 26 February, 2017, 10:13pm

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Mainland China is primed to become a global leader in the implementation of blockchain, the distributed ledger technology behind cryptocurrency bitcoin, as the central government reinforces the creation of digital intelligent services in the country, according to industry experts.

That development is expected to run in parallel with preparations being made by the mainland’s telecommunications industry to roll out advanced 5G mobile services by 2020.

“When 5G, the Internet of Things and autonomous driving start to get more prevalent then blockchain could potentially become the underlying ledger to record transactions and maintain trust in those applications,” Vijay Mayadas, the vice-president of corporate strategy and head of blockchain strategy at Broadridge Financial Solutions, told the South China Morning Post.

Mayadas pointed out that blockchain standards in the most significant areas of financial services, such as clearance and settlement, reference data management and know-your-customer utilities, would likely be finalised by 2020, thanks to the work of various blockchain consortia and forward-looking government regulators.

Blockchain technology may bring up to US$12bn in annual savings to the world’s largest investment banks, study says

For 5G, the current timetable of the International Telecommunications Union – the United Nations agency responsible for drawing up a single global standard for 5G – has an agreement on the specifications reached between 2019 and 2020.



According to global consultancy Accenture, the financial technology known as blockchain represents a secure transaction ledger database that is shared by all parties participating in an established, distributed network of computers. It records and stores every transaction or exchange of data that occurs in the network, essentially eliminating the need for a central authority and providing greater transparency for regulatory reporting.

The initial interest in blockchain has largely been in financial services, especially in digital currency, payment processing, and market trading and settlement.

An industry survey released earlier this month by US management consulting firm Bain & Company and financial technology provider Broadridge estimated the total capital savings to global financial market ecosystems from adopting blockchain technology would be between US$15 billion to US$30 billion.

It found more than 80 per cent of international financial market executives interviewed expect blockchain to be adopted by financial institutions from 2020.

“China has a very large, integrated and highly domestic [financial services] market infrastructure that can drive blockchain a lot more quicker than the US,” Mayadas said.

A report this month by Accenture Labs, the consultancy’s research and development arm, said the potential disruptive value of blockchain has expanded to other areas.

Use of blockchain in finance to become widespread in 5 years, say asset managers

Those include consumer data, in terms of health care records, travel documents, and employee benefits and insurance; commerce, including retail payments, secure messaging, content management and smart contracts; and public services, such as global criminal records, census and so-called smart elections.

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China’s advantages in blockchain applications is highlighted by major start-up innovation in digital currency, as two-thirds of bitcoin’s global infrastructure has been set up on the mainland, Emmanuel Viale, the managing director at Accenture Labs in France, said over the weekend.

The People’s Bank of China, the country’s central bank, has also reportedly completed its trials for a national digital currency.

In addition, Viale said the central government has rolled out policy support for blockchain development in its 13th Five-Year Plan on Informatisation from 2016 to 2020. Informatisation refers to the extent an economy is becoming information-based through telecommunications, media and technology.

The latest five-year plan, for the first time, has focused on developing advanced technologies, such as big data, artificial intelligence and blockchain, Viale said.

Accenture identified Alibaba Group affiliate Ant Financial Services, WeBank and Ping An Insurance among the big mainland players testing blockchain. Alibaba owns the Post.

“China’s financial services companies have an advantage over many global competitors because they are not hobbled by outdated legacy systems,” said Albert Chan, the managing director for financial services at Accenture China.


This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as:
china to lead advances in blockchain usage


http://www.scmp.com/tech/china-tech...d-push-advances-blockchain-and-5g-development
 
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In fintech, China shows the way

Advanced technology, backward banks and soaring wealth make China a leader in fintech

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From the print edition | Finance and economics
Feb 25th 2017 | SHANGHAI

CHINESE banks are not far removed from the age of the abacus. In the 1980s they used these ancient counting boards for much of their business. In the 1990s many bank employees had to pass a basic abacus test. Today the occasional click-clack, click-clack can still be heard in villages as tellers slide their abacus beads up and down the rack.

But these days the abacus is mainly a symbol, more likely to be used in the branding of China’s online-finance companies than as a calculating tool. At least three internet lenders have paid homage to it in their names: Abacus Loans, Small Abacus and Modern Abacus. The prominence, so recently, of the abacus is testament to how backward Chinese banking was a short time ago. The rise of the online lenders shows how quickly change has come.

By just about any measure of size, China is the world’s leader in fintech (short for “financial technology”, and referring here to internet-based banking and investment). It is far and away the biggest market for digital payments, accounting for nearly half of the global total. It is dominant in online lending, occupying three-quarters of the global market. A ranking of the world’s most innovative fintech firms gave Chinese companies four of the top five slots last year. The largest Chinese fintech company, Ant Financial, has been valued at about $60bn, on a par with UBS, Switzerland’s biggest bank.

How did fintech get so big in China? The short answer is that it was the right thing at the right time in the right place. Even after Chinese banks tucked away their abacuses, they remained remarkably unsophisticated for a high-speed economy. People accumulated wealth but had few good outlets for investing. Entrepreneurs were full of ideas but struggled to get startup loans. Consumers were spending but needed wads of cash to do so.

New technology offered a way to vault over these many contradictions. During the past decade China became the country with more internet users than any other—more than 700m. A potential revolution beckoned but plodding state-owned banks were slow to respond. The terrain was open for battalions of hungry companies. Some entrepreneurs had roots in e-commerce, others in online gaming, many were just first-timers.

Today, the promise of fintech in China is great. It is shaking up a stodgy banking system and helping build a more efficient one, especially for consumers and small businesses. But limitations are also clear. Banks are fighting back. And regulators, tolerant so far, are wading in. For years China has looked to developed countries for ideas about how to manage its financial system. When it comes to fintech, the rest of the world will be studying China’s experience.

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The rise of fintech in China is most notable in three areas. The first, obvious in daily life, is mobile payments. China’s middle-class consumers, emerging as the internet took off, have always been inclined to shop online (see chart 1). This made them big, early adopters of digital payments. China also had a late-starter advantage. Developed economies long ago swapped cash for plastic (credit and debit cards). China was, until a decade ago, overwhelmingly cash-based.

The shift to digital payments accelerated with the arrival of smartphones, bought by many Chinese who had never owned a personal computer. Today 95% of China’s internet users go online via mobile devices. Alipay, the payments arm of Alibaba, an e-commerce giant, soon became the mobile wallet of choice. But it quickly faced a challenge, when Tencent, a gaming-to-messaging company, launched a payment function in its wildly popular WeChat phone app, tapping its 500m-strong user base. Baidu, China’s main search engine, followed with its own wallet.

Smartpurses

Competition has sparked a stream of innovations, especially in the way mobile apps can connect online to face-to-face retail transactions. QR codes, the matrix-like bar codes that generally failed to catch on in the West, have become ubiquitous in Chinese restaurants and shops. Users simply open WeChat or Alipay, scan a QR code and make a payment. And phones themselves can serve as payment cards: with another click, users display their own bar codes, which shopkeepers then scan. And it is as easy for people to send money to each other as it is to send a text message—a vast improvement over the bricks of cash that used to change hands.

Many of the payment functions within WeChat or Alipay exist elsewhere in the world, but in disaggregated form: Stripe or PayPal for online shops processing payments; Apple Pay or Android Pay for those using their phones as wallets; Facebook Messenger or Venmo for friends transferring money. In China all these different functions have been combined onto single platforms. Adoption is widespread. For about 425m Chinese, or 65% of all mobile users, phones act as wallets, the world’s highest penetration rate, according to China’s ministry of industry and information technology. Mobile payments hit 38trn yuan ($5.5trn) last year, up from next to nothing five years earlier—and more than 50 times the size of the American market.

Small is beautiful

A second area where China has become the global leader is online lending. In most countries, banks overlook small borrowers. This problem is especially acute in China. State-owned banks dominate the financial system, with a preference for lending to state-owned companies. The absence of a mature system for assessing consumer credit-risk adds to banks’ reluctance to lend to individuals. Grey-market lenders such as pawn shops provide financing but at usurious interest rates.

Fintech has started to fill this gap. E-commerce was again the launch-pad: online shopping platforms developed loan services, and are using their customers’ transactions and personal information to create credit scores. (How the government might eventually harvest data for social control is cause for concern, but for now lenders are merely trying to master the basics of credit ratings.) Shoppers on Alibaba and JD.com, China’s two biggest e-commerce portals, can conveniently borrow small amounts, typically less than 10,000 yuan. According to Ant Financial (Alibaba’s financial arm, spun out in 2014), 60% of borrowers in this category had never used a credit card. On their platforms, Ant and JD.com also lend to merchants, many of whom are the kinds of small businesses long ignored by banks.

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However, e-commerce lending is intrinsically cautious. Its targets are clients already well-known to the big shopping platforms. For the more radical side of China’s online lending, look instead at the explosion of peer-to-peer (P2P) credit. From just 214 P2P lenders in 2011, there were more than 3,000 by 2015 (see chart 2). Initially free from regulatory oversight, P2P soon morphed into China’s financial Wild West, brimming with frauds and dangerous funding models. More than a third of all P2P firms have already shut down.

Yet P2P lenders still have a big role to play in China. Despite a string of headline-grabbing collapses, the industry has continued to grow. Outstanding P2P loans increased 28-fold from 30bn yuan at the start of 2014 to 850bn yuan today. The online lenders answer a basic need, like China’s grey-market lenders of old, but in modern garb and, thanks to all the competition, offering credit at lower interest rates.

In other countries, P2P firms typically lend to clients online and obtain funding from institutional investors. The most successful lenders in China flip that approach on its head. Because of the lack of consumer credit ratings, they vet borrowers in person. Lufax, China’s biggest P2P firm, operates shops—more than 500 in 200 cities—for loan applicants. And for funding, Chinese P2P firms draw almost entirely on retail investors. More than 4m people invest on P2P platforms, up by a third over the past year. The platforms can then divide loans into small chunks, parcelling them out to investors to disperse risks.

This points to the third area of China’s fintech prowess: investment. Until recently, Chinese savers faced two extreme options for managing their money: stash it in bank accounts, where interest rates were artificially low, but it was as safe as the Communist Party; or punt on the stockmarket, about as safe as playing baccarat in a casino in Macau. “In the middle there was nothing,” says Huang Hao, vice-president of Ant Financial. Fintech has opened that middle ground.

In the West asset managers increasingly worry that they face a wave of disintermediation as investors migrate online. In China asset managers barely had a chance to serve as intermediaries in the first place; the market skipped into the digital stage. In large part this resulted from a generational divide that is the inverse of the global norm: the best-paid workers in China tend to be younger, the country’s first big generation of white-collar workers. They are much more likely to be willing to trust web-based platforms to manage their money. “In America people love technology, too, when they are 22. They just don’t have any money,” says Gregory Gibb, Lufax’s chief executive.


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The biggest breakthrough was the launch of an online fund by Alibaba in 2013. This fund, Yu’e Bao (or “leftover treasure”), was promoted as a way for people to earn interest on the cash in their e-commerce accounts. The appeal, though, turned out to be much broader. Invested through a money-market fund, Yu’e Bao offered returns in line with the interbank market, where interest rates float freely (see chart 3). This meant that savers could get rates that were more than three percentage points higher than those banks offered. And risk was minimal, because their cash was still ultimately in the hands of banks. Yu’e Bao attracted 185m customers within 18 months, giving it 600bn yuan of assets under management.

As is so often the case in China, new entrants soon appeared. In 2014 Tencent launched Licaitong, an online fund platform linked to WeChat. Within a year, it had 100bn yuan under management. Lufax, meanwhile, outgrew its P2P roots to transform itself into a financial “supermarket”, offering personal loans, asset-backed securities, mutual funds, insurance and more. Robo-advisers (firms that use algorithms and surveys to let users build portfolios) also have China in their sights.

Give me your pennies

And it is not just about wealthy investors. In the West people generally need deep pockets before they can afford to buy into products such as money-market funds. In China all it takes is a smartphone and an initial buy-in of as little as 1 yuan. WeChat, with 800m active accounts, and Ant, with 400m, can afford to be generous.

How to gauge the impact of fintech in China? Measured against the rest of the country’s colossal financial system, the various fintech pieces are puny. Apps and online lenders might have massive user bases, but they are mainly comprised of consumers and small businesses, not the hulking state-owned enterprises and government entities that form the backbone of the banking system. The outstanding balance of P2P credit is roughly 0.8% of total bank loans. Credit provided by the e-commerce firms adds up to even less. Earnings from mobile payments amount to barely 2% of bank revenues.

Wei Hou, an analyst with Bernstein Research, reckons that the fintech firms will grab less than a twentieth of banks’ business by 2020. That is hardly to be sneezed at, since it comfortably equates to 1trn yuan in revenues. But it is not the kind of radical disruption that fintech’s more ardent evangelists often foretell.

Nevertheless, just looking at the overall size of fintech is insufficient. In the market segments they have set their sights on, fintech firms have made a big mark. Digital payments account for nearly two-thirds of non-cash payments in China, far surpassing debit and credit cards. P2P loans make up about a fifth of all consumer credit.

What’s more, fintech firms have provoked a competitive response. Take the customer experience at China’s biggest banks: it has improved markedly over the past few years. Once-cumbersome online-banking portals are much easier to use.

Even more important, banks are also changing their business models. Prodded in part by the online investment funds, they have moved away from their plain-vanilla deposit-taking roots. Their focus has shifted to “wealth-management products” (WMPs), deposit-like investments which they sell to their clients, often via mobile apps. Returns are as high as anything on Alipay or Tencent. The banks’ apps are not as slick, but not far off, and they feel far safer, with their reassuringly physical thousands of branches. The outstanding value of WMPs has reached more than 26trn yuan, quadrupling in five years. WMPs have brought new risks into the financial system, in particular concerns over banks’ funding stability. But they have arguably done more to promote interest-rate liberalisation than any regulatory edict.

And banks have come to appreciate their own strengths: branch networks; solid reputations; and risk controls. “You can’t say that banks or fintech firms are better positioned. Both need each other,” says Li Hongming, chairman of Huishang Bank, the main lender in Anhui, a big central province. Fintech upstarts have also learned that lesson. Look at Wheat Finance, one of the country’s earliest P2P lenders, established in 2009. Amy Huang, Wheat’s CEO, says her initial goal was to challenge banks on their home turf. But she soon realised that banks have insuperable advantages, with their stable, low-cost funding bases. Instead of battling them, Wheat is becoming their partner: 70% of its revenues come from selling digital services to banks.

Regulatory attitudes are also shifting. China’s government initially gave fintech companies a free hand, a striking contrast to its heavy policing of traditional banks. The hunch was that fintech firms were small enough for any problems to be manageable, and might produce useful innovations. This wager paid off: the rise of mobile payments and online lending owe much to light regulation.

But the era of benign neglect is over. In 2016, provoked in part by the P2P scandals, China introduced regulations to cover most fintech activities. Most of the rules are aimed at making fintech safer, not at curbing it. Firms can no longer pursue their most ambitious strategies. Individuals, for instance, can borrow no more than 200,000 yuan from any one P2P lender.

Some of the regulations, though, also constrain what fintech firms can hope to achieve. The central bank is overseeing the creation of an online-payments clearance platform. It wants transparency: all digital payments will be visible to the central bank. But it could neutralise one of the main advantages of Ant and Tencent, forcing them to share transaction data with banks. It seemed, for a time, that China’s internet titans might go after banks’ crown jewels, when they obtained licences to run online banks. But the government has required that they act in partnership with existing banks for even the most basic functions such as deposits and withdrawals.

Yet this is not the end of the road. Ant and Tencent still have hundreds of millions of users between them on apps that offer a wide range of financial services and products. They just need to persuade enough users to view them not simply as mobile wallets but as mobile brokers and lenders. As Lufax and JD.com hone their offerings, they, too, will grow more powerful. Regulations have placed speed bumps along their path. But the path is still there.

The Chinese are coming

China’s fintech champions are also trying to break into new territory abroad. WeChat’s mobile wallet is usable internationally, mostly in Asia for now. Ant has invested in mobile-finance companies in India, South Korea and Thailand. But replicating their successes in other markets will not be straightforward. Much of their repertoire was devised specifically to address deficiencies in China’s financial system. And anything that touches on core banking abroad will require local incorporation and adherence to local regulations—headwinds against global expansion.

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China’s bigger impact is likely to be indirect. Its fintech giants have shown what can be done. For emerging markets, the lesson is that with the right technology, it is possible to leapfrog to new forms of banking. For developed markets, China offers a vision of the grand consolidation—apps that combine payments, lending and investment—that the future should hold.

And the biggest lesson of all: it is not upstarts versus incumbents but rather a question of how banks absorb the fintech innovations blossoming around them. China, an early adopter of the abacus, is, after a long period of dormancy, once again blazing a trail in finance.

This article appeared in the Finance and economics section of the print edition under the headline "The age of the appacus"

https://www.economist.com/news/fina...rd-banks-and-soaring-wealth-make-china-leader
 
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China to Lead the Way for Blockchain Usage
Rebecca Campbell
28/02/2017

Industry experts have said that China is set to lead the way with the use of blockchain as it reinforces the development of digital intelligent services, reports the South China Morning Post.

According to the report, this development is running alongside plans by the country’s telecommunications industry as it works at rolling out 5G mobile services by 2020.

Vijay Mayadas, the vice-president of corporate strategy and head of blockchain strategy at Broadridge Financial Solutions, said to the South China Morning Post, that:

When 5G, the Internet of Things and autonomous driving start to get more prevalent then blockchain could potentially become the underlying ledger to record transactions and maintain trust in those applications.

Even though China has been slower to adopt the technology compared to other countries, it’s certainly making up for lost time. It’s doing this through its banks, which are hiring experts and developers to keep up-to-date with the technology-driven landscape.

Despite housing four of the world’s five largest banks by capital, the Chinese banking system still relies on paper and faxes. However, it is attempting to make the leap to a paperless, secure, auditable, and tamper-proof system through the blockchain as the technology gains pace.

In 2016, 86 percent of companies surveyed in China reported fraud, according to Kroll, a business intelligence firm. As the use of the blockchain gains in popularity for different use cases, Chinese regulators are beginning to see the technology as the ideal solution to stopping fraud.

Other global banks are also turning their attention to exploring blockchain to prevent fraud risk in the $4 trillion trade financing industry.

Not only that, but a survey from IBM, which looked at 200 global banks, found that 34 percent of those surveyed believed that blockchain would occur and ultimately envelop their banking services by 2020.

Digital Currency Interest

China’s boost in blockchain applications is highlighted by its increased interest in digital currency.

At the beginning of the year, the People’s Bank of China (PBOC) announced that it had completed a trial run of digital currency based on blockchain technology. According to the report, it revealed how the government plans on setting up the digital payment infrastructure when functional and ready for deployment.

Such a move clearly demonstrates the country’s commitment to staying ahead of competition and the fact that it understands the benefits that the blockchain can produce in the long-term. With its advancements, it’s set to become the global leader in the technology’s usage.

https://www.cryptocoinsnews.com/china-lead-way-blockchain-usage/
 
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China is new leader in fintech worldwide with 39% of global volume [infographics]
The prospect for fintech is positive in Asia, with majority of global funding in fintech companies going into the region
Igor Pesin, 24 Mar, 2017

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2016 became the first year when the US lost its dominant global leadership in fintech  –  lost to Asia! Only the previous year, Asian fintech was twice smaller than the US, and just last year, it easily surpassed the US, accounting for 47 per cent of the global volume, as you can find in the new issue of Money Of The Future 2016/2017 fintech report.

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Why did it happen, and how Asia grew so fast? The answer is simple: This growth is driven by fintech “megadeals” that happened in China. Many large local players — internet and IT giants, traditional banks and insurance companies, funds and financial holdings — realised just in time that there is an enormous potential in the fintech market in China. From the beginning, these companies played really big, providing massive investments to several companies in the market, including: Ant Financial (AliPay mobilises for wordwide expansion), JD Financial, Lufax, and others.

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While we don’t see the real increase in terms of number of deals (257 deals last year against 221 in 2015), the cheque sizes are getting bigger and bigger, increasing the volume of the whole market (+60 per cent Y0Y).

Read the full article at https://e27.co/china-new-leader-fintech-worldwide-39-global-volume-infographics-20170324/
 
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Going global inevitable for China's fintech
By Dai Tian in Boao, Hainan province | chinadaily.com.cn | Updated: 2017-03-23 15:13

It's inevitable that China's internet finance companies will go global, thanks to its vast domestic market and rapid growth, an official of the country's think tank said on Thursday.

With the internationalization of payment systems as an initial move, more and more Chinese internet financial companies will "go out" for equity investment and acquisitions to set up their global branches, Hu Bin, deputy director of the Institute of Finance and Banking at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences (CASS), said.

Hu made these remarks on the sidelines of the Boao Forum for Asia Annual Conference 2017 in Hainan province which started on Thursday.

"We can already see the presence of Chinese players globally in trade settlements and retail payments," Hu said, citing the widespread use of Alipay and outbound investments made by Alibaba's financial arm Ant Financial Services Group.​

He noted that such global expansion would also be in line with the renminbi's internationalization.

The biggest challenge lies in satisfying regulations required by destination markets with a coordinated regulatory body at home needed to start with, Hu added.

As a keynote research project, the Internet Finance Report 2017, released during the forum, states that China should learn from the United Kingdom and Singapore, in opening a trial space for innovative financial products and allowing healthy interaction between regulators and market participants.

Such relaxation should come under an innovative regulation system to ward off risks from mixed financial operation and arbitrage, according to the report.

http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/business/2017-03/23/content_28654588.htm
 
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Going global inevitable for China's fintech
By Dai Tian in Boao, Hainan province | chinadaily.com.cn | Updated: 2017-03-23 15:13

It's inevitable that China's internet finance companies will go global, thanks to its vast domestic market and rapid growth, an official of the country's think tank said on Thursday.

With the internationalization of payment systems as an initial move, more and more Chinese internet financial companies will "go out" for equity investment and acquisitions to set up their global branches, Hu Bin, deputy director of the Institute of Finance and Banking at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences (CASS), said.

Hu made these remarks on the sidelines of the Boao Forum for Asia Annual Conference 2017 in Hainan province which started on Thursday.

"We can already see the presence of Chinese players globally in trade settlements and retail payments," Hu said, citing the widespread use of Alipay and outbound investments made by Alibaba's financial arm Ant Financial Services Group.​

He noted that such global expansion would also be in line with the renminbi's internationalization.

The biggest challenge lies in satisfying regulations required by destination markets with a coordinated regulatory body at home needed to start with, Hu added.

As a keynote research project, the Internet Finance Report 2017, released during the forum, states that China should learn from the United Kingdom and Singapore, in opening a trial space for innovative financial products and allowing healthy interaction between regulators and market participants.

Such relaxation should come under an innovative regulation system to ward off risks from mixed financial operation and arbitrage, according to the report.

http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/business/2017-03/23/content_28654588.htm

Oh, come to The Netherlands, brothers... after Brexit... Amsterdam might become the new City... China's capital and FinTech can be a deciding factor...
 
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Oh, come to The Netherlands, brothers... after Brexit... Amsterdam might become the new City... China's capital and FinTech can be a deciding factor...

Almost next door.:D


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Online payment tool looks beyond China's borders

By He Wei in Shanghai | China Daily | Updated: 2017-03-30

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Alipay lands in the Santa Claus village in Arctic Circle, Finland, in December, 2016, signaling the first-ever mobile payment solution available in Finland. [Photo provided to China Daily]

Alipay was created in 2004 as a tool to allow transactions on Alibaba's Taobao e-commerce site. But it has enjoyed exponential growth since, by introducing a string of financial products and services.

Now the popular payment tool is rolling out its businesses abroad to provide the world with its own brand of mobile solutions.

Overseas, Alipay is accepted at more than 100,000 merchants, including high-end shopping malls such as Harrods and Printemps, both magnets for Chinese consumers. In the latest national holidays, Alipay saw the number of its overseas transactions quadruple, among which Europe secured the fastest growth with 18 times year-on-year.

To quench the thirst of wealthier Chinese buyers, Alipay even introduced its payment services in October at 10 major overseas international airports in Germany, Japan and New Zealand. Departure tax refunds services processed by Alipay were also made available in 23 countries.

From buying luxury bags to paying Uber bills, the country's top wireless payment provider has a vision to serve 2 billion global customers in the next decade, with more than 60 percent of users from outside the Chinese mainland. Currently overseas users have reached 200 million.

Apart from setting up six branch offices in the United States, Singapore, South Korea, the United Kingdom, Luxembourg and Australia, nominating ex-Goldman Sachs banker Douglas Feagin to oversee global businesses fits the pattern for a global push.

But its ambition does not stop here. Through signing pacts with financial institutions and distributing tech platforms to retailers, the company is laying a solid ground for what could eventually be a major rivalry to banking monopolies and the likes of Visa Inc.

Such agreements include the partnership with leading European banks BNP Paribas, Barclays, UniCredit, and Six Payment Services, a major payment service firm, to enable more European merchants to accept Alipay as a payment method.

In the US that many Chinese visit, Ant Financial teamed up with US payment technology providers First Data Corp and Verifone, to expand its presence through the duo's extensive networks.

Its latest endeavor to buy US-based money transfer network MoneyGram was put on pause, when a counterbid trumped Ant's offer. But the momentum to link up with foreign partners will continue.

In a keynote speech at Money 2020 in Las Vegas, Feagin said: "We aim to have at least 1 million merchants outside the Chinese mainland accepting Alipay within three years. Working with our network of global partners like First Data and Verifone will help us achieve the goal.

The third cornerstone strategy held by Ant Financial is the advancement of inclusive finance in the global arena. In the words of its chief executive Eric Jing, the company wants to spread to the world its experience in serving the under-banked population using the mobile channel.

In December, a South Korean lender K-Bank helped co-launch and obtained the first operating license for online-only banks, another score for Ant Financial in overseas expansion.

The company believed the K-Bank case represents a "unique globalization model" that differs from overseas mergers and acquisition-a common path taken by Chinese firms as they march beyond borders.

"We export our leading technologies and expand global influence. We expect it to become a new 'Chinese name card' and consolidate our position in the ICT industry," said a company statement.

K-Bank marks yet another celebration for Ant Financial after its parent Alibaba Group upped the stakes in Paytm, an Alipay-like payment system in India that the company helped foster, and tied up with Ascend Money in Thailand. Both companies would mimic Alipay's services such as offline payment and micro loans in their countries so that people could complete a variety of purchases with a scan of their phones.

Payment users have grown rapidly from 20 million to more than 140 million in less than two years, said Alipay's vice-head Ni Xingjun. Overseas expansion in the next few years will target economies along the Belt and Road Initiative, he stated.

"We see the most pressing needs in Southeast Asian nations, because of a bigger population base and lack of credit card culture, which spells more opportunities," he said.
 
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WeChat Expands in Europe in Bid for Global Advertisers, Payments
by Giles Turner and Lulu Yilun Chen
March 30, 2017, 7:50 PM GMT+11
  • WeChat opening new offices in U.K. to win over major brands
  • Messaging app looking to work with regional payment providers

WeChat, China’s most popular social media and messaging service, has launched a new bid in Europe and the U.S. to develop its payments offering and win new advertisers.

Owned by Tencent Holdings Ltd., WeChat is looking to launch an office in the U.K. and another European country, alongside its existing presence in Italy. Tencent, which has an established office in San Francisco, is also looking to grow its WeChat team in the U.S., targeting advertisers and payments providers.

“We needed to make a step closer in serving European brands,” said Tencent Europe director Andrea Ghizzoni, in an interview with Bloomberg.

WeChat, which also hosts payments and brand pages, has more than 889 million users in its home country, yet remains largely unused outside of its home country.


China's WeChat Takes on the West

Andrea Ghizzoni, Europe director at Tencent, discusses plans for WeChat in Europe and where they’re heading next.

It is not the first time WeChat has attempted to win over Western users. In 2013 the app hired soccer star Lionel Messi in a high profile campaign outside of China. “There were lots of downloads” of the app, said Ghizzoni. “However stickiness was slow.”

WeChat is now focusing more on business-to-business, encouraging Western brands to sell products on the WeChat platform. The service is courting “high-value” brands in countries like the U.K. and Italy, Ghizzoni said in a Bloomberg Television interview. Burberry and Chanel are already high-profile clients on WeChat’s platform.

In Europe, the focus is first on fashion and luxury goods, and will in time expand to travel and broader retail services. WeChat is hoping its expansion in Europe will convince more high-profile brands onto the platform, not only to reach consumers in China, but also Chinese tourists visiting Europe.

Goldman Sachs estimates that 220 million Chinese tourists will travel overseas by 2025, up from 120 million in 2015.

“Tencent could be following Chinese travelers to Europe and the U.S., as many of these consumers are going overseas for shopping,” said Marie Sun, a Shenzhen-based analyst at Morningstar Investment Service. “It would make sense for brands to advertise on WeChat which is a large and effective platform.

Payments Push

Tencent’s payment business is booming, as its average daily transactions topped 600 million a day in December. Chinese consumers are using the service to pay for everything from ride-hailing to food takeout.

But while WeChat has been one of the leading providers in offering chat-based payment systems, its global competitors have been ramping up the competition.

Facebook Inc., which owns WhatsApp, has been expanding its payments offering within its messaging apps, while Alibaba Group Holding Ltd.’sfinance affiliate has been busy pushing Alipay in Europe. In August, Ant Financial, Alipay’s parent, announced a partnership with Ingenico Group SA, a French payments group, to allow Chinese tourists to pay for goods in Europe via the group’s e-wallet platform.

“We are talking to different payments institutions in Europe,” said Ghizzoni, “in order to integrate them into WeChat.”

Ghizzoni flagged the U.K.’s high-profile payments industry as a major reason for setting up in the country. WeChat is working with media agency Digital Retex in the U.K., who are helping set up an initial office in Mayfair. The messaging app will add more staff, from IT to operations, over the next year.

“Tencent could be trying to do what Alipay is doing,” said Sun, “but there’s much more uncertainty in terms of when the business could take off, as it would need to overcome many regulatory hurdles.”

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/arti...europe-in-bid-for-global-advertisers-payments
 
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What is China: WeChat offers smartphone payment, booking services
CGTN
Published on 7 Jan 2017
Can you spend a whole day without using cash or cards? In China, making mobile payments from your smartphone has become a way of life. Check out how CGTN reporter Nathan King spent a day without his wallet in Guangzhou.
 
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Panic Arises As Chinese Company Plans To Acquire U.S. MoneyGram
By PYMNTS Posted on April 3, 2017

Foreign interference with U.S. organizations or the government is always a concern. Following the 2016 presidential election, this concern has likely only increased its level. As such, when Ant Financial, which is owned in part by the Chinese government, announced its plans in January to acquire U.S.-based money-transfer company MoneyGram for $880 million, significant worries arose.

Specifically, the concerns are around the exposure of millions of Americans’ personal data, including government employees and military.

Several U.S. lawmakers and national security experts have voiced concerns that the Committee on Foreign Investment is ill-equipped to fully assess this acquisition process to fully determine all security weaknesses of the deal.

North Carolina Representative Robert Pittenger voiced his thoughts on the businesses deal: “If the transaction is approved, China would gain direct access to a significant amount of transactional data in MoneyGram’s network. The data would include names, bank account numbers, as well as the location of MoneyGram customers.”

With several MoneyGrams close to U.S. military bases and locations in approximately 200 countries, the U.S. fears this business deal would make the country more prone to foreign espionage and cyberattacks. Many U.S. officials are calling for a more rigorous review process of the deal.

While Ant Financial spokesman, Reze Wong, tried to calm these concerns, the U.S. is still approaching the situation with caution. “They (the Chinese government) are non-controlling stakes, don’t participate in management and don’t have access to things like consumer data,” Wong said.

MoneyGram also shared a statement with POLITICO Magazine to help ensure any concerns were addressed: “We [will] continue to operate as a stand-alone company, and customer information will continue to be encrypted and stored on our IT systems in Minneapolis in accordance with all applicable data protection requirements.”

It’s likely this deal will take several more months of investigations and probing before it moves forward.

http://www.pymnts.com/news/partners...uire-u-s-moneygram-ant-financial-acquisition/


Chinese grab for U.S. money transfer giant sets off alarms
The purchase by Ant Financial, which is partially owned by the Chinese government, poses a test for the Treasury Department oversight body.
By Bryan Bender 04/01/17 07:11 AM EDT

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'If the transaction is approved, China would gain direct access to a significant amount of transactional data in MoneyGram’s network,' warns Rep. Robert Pittenger. | Getty

A Chinese company’s plans to acquire U.S. money transfer giant MoneyGram is raising fears that the communist government in Beijing could gain sensitive intelligence on Americans’ personal and financial information — including data on thousands of government employees and military personnel.

The purchase by Ant Financial, which is partially owned by the Chinese government, also poses a test for the 42-year-old Treasury Department oversight body that has been asked to review the deal to determine any security risks.

Lawmakers, national security experts and veterans of the review process say the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States is ill-designed to assess all the national security implications of international mergers in the age of information — including the often-blurry picture of who actually controls foreign firms or who has access to an international company’s sensitive data.

Moreover, they say, it is severely understaffed to handle the rising number of complicated cases and lacks the authority to address evolving threats in telecommunications, media, agriculture and other industries.

In the case of Ant Financial’s proposed acquisition of MoneyGram, critics say, the fallout could include exposing personal data on millions of Americans.

CFIUS is expected to complete its review during the next several months.

"If the transaction is approved, China would gain direct access to a significant amount of transactional data in MoneyGram’s network," warns Rep. Robert Pittenger, a North Carolina Republican who serves on the Financial Services Committee and is vice chair of the Task Force on Terrorist Financing. "The data would include names, bank account numbers, as well as the location of MoneyGram customers."

Like other CFIUS critics, Pittenger wants a more rigorous review process to ensure such deals do not make the U.S. more vulnerable to foreign espionage, blackmail or cyberattacks.

Dozens of MoneyGram locations lie inside or within a few miles of some of the largest U.S. military installations, including Fort Bragg, N.C., where soldiers, their families and defense contractors commonly use the company’s money transfer services.

MoneyGram also has locations in about 200 countries. Pittenger told POLITICO he is concerned that the Chinese government could "leverage this personal information to harass dissidents, journalists and human rights activists who dare challenge the Chinese Communist Party.”

Personal data can also fuel a variety of cyberattacks, helping hackers trick these targets into giving up login credentials to sensitive accounts.

The $880 million deal, announced in January, was described by Ant as "a significant milestone." The combination of the two firms, it said, "will provide greater access, security and simplicity for people around the world to remit funds."

The company insists that while Chinese government-owned enterprises, including state-run pension funds, are among Ant Financial's shareholders — making more than 14 percent of the company’s ownership — it remains a privately run business.

"They are non-controlling stakes, don’t participate in management and don’t have access to things like consumer data," said Reze Wong, a company spokesman.

Others intimately familiar with the company's operations also reject the argument that China's leaders could gain access to data held by MoneyGram, which is headquartered in Dallas, Texas.

"You don't really understand China if you think that it has government involvement," said one source with direct knowledge who agreed to speak on the condition he not be identified by name. He said Ant "operates like any other private-sector company in the world," in which shareholders are involved in business operations "only at the macro level."

Moreover, advocates of the acquisition insist that any personal data now maintained on MoneyGram's computer servers in the U.S. will remain so under the deal and will be subject to U.S. regulations.

"We would continue to operate as a stand-alone company" and "customer information will continue to be encrypted and stored on our IT systems in Minneapolis in accordance with all applicable data protection requirements," MoneyGram said in a statement to POLITICO.

http://www.politico.com/story/2017/04/china-money-transfer-treasury-ant-financial-moneygram-236773
 
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Shanghai will be the biggest financial center in the world. 10 times bigger than the second.
 
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