The stock market flotation of Ant Group, planned to be the biggest share
offering in history, has been dramatically suspended just two days
before dealings were due to begin in Shanghai and Hong Kong.To get more
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The move came a day after the financial tech company’s top
executives including its founder, Chinese billionaire Jack Ma, were
summoned to speak to regulators.
Details of the discussions were not published but a statement from
the Shanghai stock exchange said Ant Group reported “changes to the
financial technology regulatory environment and other major issues” in
its meeting.
“This material event may cause your company to fail to meet the
issuance and listing conditions or information disclosure requirements,”
the stock market operator said in its statement to Ant. As a result it
suspended the planned listing, prompting Ant to put the Hong Kong leg on
hold as well.
China’s central bank issued new draft rules for online micro-lending
on Monday that raised the amount of cash borrowers were required to
hold. Ant Group owns Alipay, one of the dominant payment companies in
China, alongside other subsidiaries including lenders to consumers and
small businesses, a credit-scoring company and a healthcare payment
products provider.
The suspension threatens to derail the biggest ever corporate
fundraising just days after it attracted huge interest from
institutional and retail investors across the world, with bids worth
$3tn chasing $34bn (£22bn) worth of shares.
According to the original timetable Ant had been scheduled to list
on the Hong Kong and Shanghai exchanges on Thursday.The listing had been
expected to confirm Ant’s status as one of the world’s biggest
companies by valuation, with an expected market value of more than
$310bn before shares started trading. That would mean it would rival the
valuation of JP Morgan, the world’s most systemically important bank.
As well as its significance for the company, the move was seen as a
symbolic moment in China’s development as a financial centre, with one
of the world’s biggest companies eschewing a New York listing, unlike
its former parent company, Alibaba, the online retail company founded by
Ma.
Meziane Lasfer, a professor of finance at City, University of
London, said the lateness of the decision to suspend the listing could
be harmful to China’s efforts to grow its financial sector. However, he
said the greater risk to China’s reputation would be allowing the
flotation to go ahead if it had truly identified regulatory problems.
A predecessor to Ant Group was spun out of Alibaba in 2011 but the
latter retained a significant stake. New York-listed shares in Alibaba
lost 6% on Tuesday.
His stakes in Alibaba and Ant Group have made Ma, a former English
teacher, China’s richest man. Ant’s Alipay, launched in 2004, has more
than 1 billion users in China, and its Yu’e Bao money market fund is one
of the biggest in the world.
However, Chinese firms are also subject to regulation by the
Communist party, which might be more cautious if it foresaw issues
around a stock market float of Ant’s size, analysts said.
The Wall