BY MARK PARSONS AND ROY ZOU
China’s #online_payment market is growing at breakneck speed. In the first three quarters of
2015, the total volume of online transactions processed by payment institutions
exceeded RMB 56 billion, and the monetary value of transactions reached close
to RMB 3.3 trillion.
But these
impressive figures have come with significant “growing pains” in the industry,
as the quality of some of the industry participants has not consistently
matched the quantity. The collapse earlier this year of peer-to peer lender
Ezubau – an apparent Ponzi scheme that has reportedly cost 900,000 lenders over
USD 7 billion – has made the case that tighter regulation is needed in order to
curb the excesses of China’s payments revolution.
Against this
background, on 28 December 2015, the People’s Bank of China (PBOC) issued the
Measures for the Administration of Online Payment Business of Non-bank Payment
Institutions (Measures), which will become effective on July 1, 2016.
Non-bank payment
institutions in China
Online payments
via non-bank payment institutions are now widely seen all over China. The
payments are not just being used for retail purchases, but also in increasingly
innovative ways to support all manner of payments, investments, loans and money
transfers – whether on a business to consumer basis – between consumers or
between businesses. The rapid evolution of payment services models in China has
led to a number of problems and risks faced by the online payment industry and
its regulators, including the following:
·
inadequate customer due diligence procedures that
result in increased risk of fraudulent payments, money laundering and tax
avoidance
·
inadequate financial controls enabling the
embezzlement or misdirection of funds and creating risks to liquidity
·
lapses in system security that allow funds or customer
data to be misused or misappropriated, and
·
the use of payment technologies to bypass authorities’
traditional controls on “hot money” and liquidity across different financial
markets.
The PBOC has
issued the Measures in response to these and other issues.
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