BEIJING (Reuters) – China’s Ant Group is lowering borrowing limits for some young users of its Huabei virtual credit card product, the company said on Wednesday, a month after China suspended the fintech giant’s $37 billion public listing plan.
The credit limit reduction is intended to promote more “rational” spending habits among users, Ant added in a text message to Reuters.
It did not provide further details.
The move comes as Chinese regulators tighten their grip on financial technology companies, amid concerns that young and lower income borrowers could get into debt trouble.
Ant, which is controlled by Alibaba founder Jack Ma, has two credit subsidiaries, Huabei and short-term consumer loan provider Jiebei, which were used by around 500 million people in the 12 months to June 30, Ant said in its IPO prospectus.
Last month, regulators published a consultation paper on tightening rules for micro-lending that would require them to fund at least 30% of any loan they make jointly with banks. Only 2% of the loans Ant had facilitated as of end-June were on its own balance sheet, its IPO prospectus showed.
Ant’s credit businesses had loan balances of 2.1 trillion yuan ($321.25 billion) at the end of June, of which 1.7 trillion yuan was consumer credit. That compares to 8.1 trillion yuan of short-term consumer loans issued by Chinese banks.
($1 = 6.5349 Chinese yuan renminbi)
(Reporting by Yingzhi Yang and Tony Munroe in Beijing; Editing by David Goodman, Kirsten Donovan)