How billionaire Jack Ma fell to earth and took Ant's mega IPO with him
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[November 05, 2020] By
Keith Zhai, Julie Zhu and Cheng Leng
SINGAPORE/HONG KONG/BEIJING (Reuters) -
They say talk is cheap. Tell that to Jack Ma.
Corporate China's shiniest star was just days away from seeing his Ant
Group list on the stock market in a record $37 billion deal, when he
chose to launch a blistering public attack on the country's financial
watchdogs and banks.
The regulatory system was stifling innovation and must be reformed to
fuel growth, billionaire Ma told a summit in Shanghai on Oct. 24
attended by the great and the good of China's financial, regulatory and
political establishment.
Chinese banks, he said, operated with a "pawnshop" mentality.
It was this speech that set off a chain of events that ultimately
torpedoed the listing of Ant, the fintech titan Ma founded, according to
interviews with government officials, company executives and investors.
They all requested anonymity to disclose confidential details.
Stung by the attack, Chinese regulators and Communist Party officials
set about reining in Ma's sprawling financial empire, culminating in the
suspension of the IPO on Tuesday, two days before the eagerly awaited
market debut in Shanghai and Hong Kong, the sources said.
While Ma might not have realised the impact his words would have, people
close to him had been baffled to learn in advance about the tone of the
speech he planned to deliver, according to two sources close to Ma.
They suggested the 56-year-old soften his remarks as some of China's
most senior financial regulators were due to attend, but he refused to
budge, believing he should be able to say what he wanted, the sources
said.
"Jack is Jack. He just wanted to speak his mind," said one of the
people.
It was a costly miscalculation.
Several senior financial regulatory officials were furious at Ma's
criticism, two sources told Reuters, with one source characterising the
speech as a "punch in their faces".
State regulators started compiling reports including one on how Ant had
used digital financial products like Huabei, a virtual credit card
service, to encourage poor and young people to build up debt, according
to the two people.
The general office of the State Council compiled a report on public
sentiment about Ma's speech and submitted it to senior leaders including
President Xi Jinping, the sources said.
Some of the reports indicated public sentiment was negative on Ma and
his remarks, the people said.
Top Chinese leaders then became more involved and asked for a thorough
investigation of the company's business activities, which eventually led
to the halting of the world's biggest IPO, three of the sources said.
The People's Bank of China (PBOC), the China Banking and Insurance
Regulatory Commission, China Securities Regulatory Commission, the State
Administration of Foreign Exchange,and the State Council Information
Office did not immediately reply to Reuters requests for comment.
Ma could not immediately be reached by Reuters for comment and
e-commerce group Alibaba, which handles media inquiries for Ma, did not
respond to a request for comment on this story from its lead founder.
The chance of the flotation getting back on track in the near-term is
slim, according to six of the people, as regulators look to tighten
scrutiny of the company. No listing is expected for at least the next
few months, two said.
SCRUTINY INTENSIFIES
It was a stunning reversal for Ma, who would have added at least $27
billion to his net worth from the IPO.
In years gone by, most regulators had left the billionaire to his own
devices, partly because of his close ties to some senior government
officials, according to five of the sources, but also because of
national pride in his success.
Ma, a former English teacher, is one of China's internet pioneers,
building an e-commerce empire with Alibaba and a fintech giant with Ant.
When the PBOC tried to regulate Ant's payment and wealth management
business about five years ago, Ma bypassed the central bank after
failing to reach a consensus with regulatory officials and lobbied the
central government. The PBOC later dropped those regulation plans.
"Jack Ma did not bypass the customary process of communicating with
relevant regulators regarding Ant's payment and wealth management
business," Ant's spokeswoman said in an emailed response to Reuters.
But with his Oct. 24 speech, Ma misjudged the shifting priorities of
Beijing, according to one senior regulatory source, believing he could
challenge the financial establishment yet retain the support of the
central leadership.
[to top of second column] |
Jack Ma, Alibaba's founder and former chairman, is seen during a
video message at the opening ceremony of the World Artificial
Intelligence Conference (WAIC) in Shanghai, China July 9, 2020.
REUTERS/Aly Song
The bigger picture was that one of the government's main aims this year is to
shore up the country's financial sector and tighten regulatory oversight to
prevent systemic risks in a pandemic-hit economy, the person said.
Even before Ma's speech, Chinese regulators were gradually increasing their
oversight of Ant, which has largely thrived as a technology platform free from
costly banking regulations despite its bouquet of financial offerings.
The scrutiny has particularly intensified for the company's rapidly growing
online consumer-lending business, a cash cow, which sources demand from retail
consumers and small businesses and passes that on to about 100 banks for
underwriting.
REGULATORS MAKE MOVE
The Shanghai speech was the trigger for a major escalation, according to half of
the dozen people interviewed, prompting senior political officials to ask
regulators, including the central bank and China's top banking regulator, for
the thorough review of Ant's businesses.
The watchdogs, who had for years wanted to rein in Ma's fintech empire, moved
fast after receiving written instructions from officials including Vice Premier
Liu He, a trusted economic adviser to President Xi, said two of the people.
The State Council Information Office did not immediately respond to a Reuters
request for comment from Liu.
As part of this drive, regulatory officials rushed to publish a consultation
paper this Monday to tighten rules for the country's micro-lending business,
which directly impacts Ant, said one person with direct knowledge.
The draft requires micro-lenders to fund at least 30% of any loan they fund
jointly with banks. Only 2% of the loans Ant had facilitated as of end-June were
on its balance sheet, its IPO prospectus showed.
Top Chinese industry players including Ant and Lufax Holding Ltd, an online
wealth management platform, were aware of the draft details weeks before its
public release, said two of the people.
Lufax, which raised $2.4 billion in a New York IPO last month, had informed
investors that regulators had required leading online micro-lenders to provide
about 20%-30% of any loan they fund jointly with banks, according to two
investors who joined its roadshow.
Lufax declined to comment due to quiet period restrictions following its IPO.
By contrast, Ant's executives did not mention the possible regulatory changes
during its two main calls with global investors during its roadshow last week,
two other investors said.
Ant's spokeswoman said the company was not aware of the details of the draft
online micro-lending rules until they were published on Monday.
HUBRIS AND HUMILITY
After the publication of the micro-lending consultation paper, Ma and the two
top Ant executives were summoned to a rare joint meeting with four regulatory
bodies.
They were told that the company, notably its consumer-lending business, would
face tougher scrutiny over matters including capital adequacy and leverage
ratios.
Regulators had been surprised by the scale and risk model of Ant's lending
division, details of which were disclosed in the IPO-related filings since late
August. The unit, which includes Huabei and short-term consumer loan provider
Jiebei, contributed close to 40% of the group's revenue in the first half of the
year.
A day later, the Shanghai stock exchange said it had suspended Ant's IPO, citing
a "significant change" in the regulatory environment, prompting the company to
also freeze the Hong Kong leg of its dual listing.
China's securities industry watchdog said subsequently that recent regulatory
changes could have a "major impact" on Ant's business structure and profit
model. It said suspending the IPO was a responsible move both for investors and
markets.
The suspension marked the nadir of what has been a gradually souring
relationship over recent years between Ma's corporate empire and Chinese
regulators, from the central bank to the internet and markets watchdogs.
After the announcement, however, Ant released a statement in which it pledged to
"embrace" regulation.
"It has no alternative but to do so," Gavekal Research analyst Andrew Batson
wrote in a report this week. "Ma's hubris has now morphed into humility."
(Reporting by Keith Zhai in Singapore, Julie Zhu in Hong Kong and Leng Cheng in
Beijing; Editing by Sumeet Chatterjee, Pravin Char and Carmel Crimmins)
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