Ant Group – Master and commander pt. II

  • Home
  • China
  • Ant Group – Master and commander pt. II

Life gets more real for online finance in China.

  • Changes to the banking rules mean that the nimble online lending sector will become much more capital intensive which will incentivise the lending platforms to be more risk-averse when it comes to making loans.
  • Online lending platforms are now being forced to have much more skin in the lending game by providing at least 30% of the funding for the loans that they offer.
  • Typically, the online platforms sell and administer the loans but it is the banking sector that takes the credit risk.
  • With this change, the online lending platforms will now look much more like banks which have two main effects.
    • First, risk-averse: it will incentivise the lending platforms to offer loans much more carefully as at least 30% of the loss will be borne by them should the borrower default.
    • Second, the banking sector: This move makes the online lending platforms much more like banks and will give the lumbering banking sector more time to adapt to online lending.
  • This comes as a further problem for Ant Group which is already feeling the regulatory heat following its founder’s ill-advised comments at a conference some months ago (see here).
  • Effectively, Ant Group is being forced to become a bank rather than a nimble online platform meaning that when it goes public or next raised capital, its valuation should include a comparison to banks as well as technology companies.
  • This is devastating for the IPO which almost got done at a mooted valuation of $300bn but I suspect will now be done at a small fraction of that.
  • For example, the Bank of China which is one of the major Chinese banks has a valuation of around $100bn and if this is used as a benchmark for Ant Group, then the IPO will be much less interesting for all concerned.
  • This regulation is also likely to hit Tencent which has substantially expanded its financial services offerings through the WeChat ecosystem and are now a meaningful part of its revenues.
  • Consequently, the outlook for the further rapid expansion of digital financial services has taken a meaningful hit in China because the costs of failure for the online lenders have just increased in leaps and bounds.
  • Both Alibaba and Tencent have corrected slightly on this news as it is merely a confirmation of that which was already well known.
  • That being said, I think that there is still an opportunity for Alibaba which remains 20% below its peak compared to Tencent which is 7% below its all-time high.
  • Furthermore, I think that the fundamental outlook for Alibaba remains better because of the acceleration of the move to online purchasing caused by the pandemic and Alibaba’s undisputed dominance in this area.
  • Finally, I don’t think that the Chinese government actually wants to put Alibaba out of business but merely to remind Jack Ma who is really in charge in China.
  • The net result is that Alibaba is likely to receive a fine and a slap on the wrist rather than a large, forced restructuring.
  • I am also more positive about the Chinese economy in the short-term as it has managed to escape much of the devastation wrought by the pandemic which is likely to hold everyone else back for a while.
  • Hence, I want to have some exposure to China and have so far done this through Alibaba and China Mobile.
  • I have owned Alibaba and China Mobile and am happy to hold on for another 20% or so.

RICHARD WINDSOR

Richard is founder, owner of research company, Radio Free Mobile. He has 16 years of experience working in sell side equity research. During his 11 year tenure at Nomura Securities, he focused on the equity coverage of the Global Technology sector.