China Plans Online Payment Rules That May Hit Ant, Tencent (yahoo.com) 27
hackingbear writes: People's Bank of China, the country's central bank, said on Wednesday that any non-bank payment company with half of the market in online transactions or two entities with a combined two-thirds share could be subject to antitrust probes, potentially dealing another blow to financial technology giant Ant Group Co. and its biggest rival Tencent Holdings Ltd. Ant's Alipay accounts of 55.6% of the Chinese online payment market, while Tencent's WeChat accounts for 38.8%, according to iResearch data.
"If a monopoly is confirmed, the central bank can suggest the cabinet impose restrictive measures including breaking up the entity by its business type," reports Yahoo Finance. "Firms already with payment licenses would have a one-year grace period to comply with the new rules, the PBOC said." Jack Ma, founder of Alibaba and Ant Groups, emerged in public as he spoke to 100 rural teachers through a video call on Wednesday for the first time since China began clamping down on his businesses, ending several months of speculation over his whereabouts. Ma last appeared publicly at a conference where he castigated China's (and that of the world's) financial regulatory systems in front of a room of high-ranked officials. His controversial remark, according to reports, prompted the Chinese regulator to abruptly halt Ant's initial public offering, which would have been the biggest public share sale of all time.
"If a monopoly is confirmed, the central bank can suggest the cabinet impose restrictive measures including breaking up the entity by its business type," reports Yahoo Finance. "Firms already with payment licenses would have a one-year grace period to comply with the new rules, the PBOC said." Jack Ma, founder of Alibaba and Ant Groups, emerged in public as he spoke to 100 rural teachers through a video call on Wednesday for the first time since China began clamping down on his businesses, ending several months of speculation over his whereabouts. Ma last appeared publicly at a conference where he castigated China's (and that of the world's) financial regulatory systems in front of a room of high-ranked officials. His controversial remark, according to reports, prompted the Chinese regulator to abruptly halt Ant's initial public offering, which would have been the biggest public share sale of all time.
Divide and conquer (Score:1)
After the gov't saw how Alibaba got too powerful for their britches, thumbing their nose at the gov't, the gov't seem more willing to enforce anti-trust now.
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Too bad America doesn't do the same with the Mastercard/Visa duopoly.
They have 90% of the market and collude to block competitors.
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Well, Discover did win a multi-billion dollar settlement against Mastercard and Visa for refusing to do business with them and subsequently partnered with Mastercard for some financial products.
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Just comply because someone else will (Score:2)
and make a new-new version knock-off of you product for the Chinese market.
Jian Yaaaang!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]
gato lengua (Score:3)
With a concerned eye towards South Korea, China's government cannot risk a Samsung at home.
If you're an authoritarian regime keeping your foot on the public's neck, rather successfully, you'd be fool to allow a single corporate entity too much power.
Much akin to the inherent benefit to her enemies when America squabbles amongst herself, the Chinese ruling party has to quash internal threats regularly... it's an ingredient in their recipe for government. The West needs to remember its form of government allows these things to be sorted out, and inevitable differences, to be lived with.
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I assume you mean funny strange, not funny haha. Monopolies, you keep using that word...
I live in Bugtussle, virtually, and I have options in ISP, cell, and internet providers. How you livin?
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Funny how so many people are all about letting the free market "sort itself out" and tout how democracy and the free world is where it's at, but we all have a problem with monopolies when we're shopping ISPs, cellular plans, or cable TV or any other situation where enormously large companies limit our options or our curb innovation
That's because the Free Market is founded on the assumption that everyone is nice. Adam Smith didn't get out much.
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And apparently Jack Ma is not as powerful/influential a member of the CCP as those he openly criticized.
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Um, wouldn't it be much easier for them if it was a single corporate entity, given that you also claim all Chinese corporations are merely extensions of the government?
Could it be that they have noticed the problems that monopolies cause and decided to avoid them in their version of capitalism?
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Reining in Challenge to State Financial Monopoly (Score:2)
Communist (Score:2, Insightful)
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When it was just a socio-economic theory of Marx and Engels.
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I gotta be honest... (Score:2)
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Gotta agree. We need to do the same for the telcos and ISPs
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I think some large companies might like it. Imagine Apple suddenly telling users they are only allowed to sell to so many customers, in order to stay under 50% of market share. Apple could simply start charging a yearly license fee for the privilege of being a customer, at market price of course (a giant auction). Want an iPhone? Get in line, wait for someone to switch to an Android phone, or pay someone to switch by buying them a brand new latest Galaxy or Pixel, plus some premium perhaps if there are a lo
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