Alibaba: the new face of finance in China
Source: reuters.com View: 228 Date: 2014-05-19

 For Yuan Yue, a Chinese graduate student in international trade, moving all of her spare cash to an online investment fund called Yu’e Bao was a no brainer.

"The yield is even higher than a bank time deposit, but a time deposit ties up your money ... so it’s better to just keep it in Yu’e Bao, because you can use the money anytime. So why keep it at the bank?" said Yuan, who studies in Shanghai.

Yu’e Bao, available on smartphones, is conveniently linked to China’s biggest online payments platform Alipay, similar to PayPal and owned by an affiliate of e-commerce giant Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. Users can dip directly into Yu’e Bao to pay for goods bought online.

As Alibaba gears up for what could be the world’s biggest tech IPO, online finance has become another focus of the sprawling firm - and while that business will be largely kept separate the offering, it could play a major role in the entire company’s future growth.

China’s banking industry is behind those of developed markets but its number of Internet users, now more than 618 million, is sparking a boom in online and mobile payments.

The total transaction value of China’s third-party online payments is expected to reach 18.5 trillion yuan ($2.97 trillion) by 2017, up 5.4 trillion yuan last year, according to Shanghai-based data firm iResearch.

Yu’e Bao’s high interest rates are an incentive to deposit money into the platform, money which can easily be used to buy products on Alibaba’s huge online shopping websites and any else that takes Alipay.

Money market fund Yu’e Bao has been such a success that the fund management company that helped launch it, Tianhong Asset Management Co, has gone near obscurity to China’s biggest in terms of assets under management (AUM) in just months.

The firm had 554 billion yuan ($88.88 billion) in AUM in the first quarter of 2014, just 10.5 billion yuan a year earlier, according to Z-Ben Advisors, a Shanghai-based investment management consultancy.

And now the company that owns Alipay, Zhejiang Alibaba E-Commerce Co, is waiting for regulatory approval to buy 51 percent of Tianhong.

Tianhong’s massive assets under management are in low risk, highly liquid money market funds, said Wang Dengfeng, Tianhong’s fund manager.

"We knew it was a break-through product and would succeed but we were surprised that it could reach today’s levels," Wang said. "We didn’t expect it to move the money market industry and also the country’s money management policies."

CHALLENGES AHEAD

Tianhong may have grown fast, but like most money market funds it has razor thin profit margins, said Chris Powers, a consultant at Z-Ben Advisors.

"The key will be whether Tianhong can take their now new name recognition and their long list of investors and use them to get them to invest in normal equity funds or fixed income funds which will really help grow their AUM but also grow their revenue," he said.

Yu’e Bao and Tianhong may also come under regulatory pressure.

Their rise has angered China’s big state-owned banks, which can’t compete on deposit interest rates as they’re controlled by the central bank. The banking regulator has been talking about possible restrictions on fund flows to e-payment platforms or even subjecting them to the same requirements as standard banks.

Alibaba founder Jack Ma is fighting back.

"It’s not the monopolies and powers that determine success in the market, it’s the consumer," Ma said on Alibaba’s mobile chat app, after banks imposed s on how much their customers could transfer to Alipay in March.

But it’s not just regulatory challenges looming.

Competitors such as China’s dominant online search company Baidu Inc and Tencent Holdings Ltd, a social networking and online gaming giant with the hugely popular WeChat mobile messaging app, have their own investment platforms for customers.

And those customers are fickle. Yuan Yue has been watching the yields on Yu’e Bao carefully as they’ve dropped below 5 percent for the first time. A one-year time deposit at a local bank pays at most 3.3 percent.

"If it falls below 4 percent I won’t keep it in Yu’e Bao," she said. "Others like WeChat and Baidu are offering similar products.

"I can split it up - 2,000 yuan in Baidu’s fund, 2,000 yuan in a WeChat fund. They all make me money and the risk is diversified."

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