Chinese tech companies are growing more powerful, and banks are turning to them for help

In This Article:

  • A lack of investment options, high smartphone and internet penetration, and rapid growth in household wealth have created a unique environment for financial services in China.

  • Almost all the mid-sized and commercial Chinese banks have signed commercial agreements with technology giants Alibaba, Tencent and Baidu in the last two to three years, according to David Yin, vice president, analyst at Moody's financial institutions group.

  • Alibaba-affiliate Ant Financial expects technology service fees will become a significant pillar of its business in the next three to five years, according to a spokesperson.

In another sign of the growing clout of China technology giants, many local banks are looking to the firms for help rather than build their own in-house services.

It's not that banks in the world's second-largest economy are at risk of being replaced or disrupted. Rather, they are under pressure to work closely with financial technology partners so they can beat competitor banks, according to Nicholas Zhu, vice president and senior analyst at Moody's financial institutions group in Beijing.

Lack of investment options, high smartphone and internet penetration, and rapid growth in household wealth have created a unique environment for financial services in China.

State-owned or state-affiliated lenders account for the majority of the local banking system. They have historically preferred to lend to state-owned enterprises because those are essentially risk free compared to consumers in a society that lacks comprehensive credit histories.

Now, thanks to the rise of mobile payments and e-commerce, China's technology companies have hordes of data on consumer behavior that can determine the risk of lending to someone. Some firms are already extending credit using that information. But, amid increased government scrutiny on financial technology companies and banks' desire to reach more retail customers, both sides are increasingly working together.

Almost all the mid-sized and commercial Chinese banks have signed commercial agreements with technology giants Alibaba BABA , Tencent 700-HK and Baidu BIDU in the last two to three years, according to David Yin, vice president and analyst at Moody's financial institutions group.

That contrasts with U.S. banks' focus on developing technology from within. J.P. Morgan JPM is set to roll out this week free trading for its more than 47 million mobile or online users. The leading free trading app in the U.S., Robinhood, has more than 5 million users.

"Integrating a customer's entire financial life, from their credit/debit cards to mortgages and (now) investments gives a financial institution the chance to collect an entire data-driven picture of what other services they might want. That allows for more intelligent cross selling and new product development," Nicholas Colas, co-founder of DataTrek Research, said in a note about J.P. Morgan's forthcoming product.