The People's Bank of China is facing headwinds from the West. Photo: Wikimedia Commons

Financial regulators in China summoned 13 internet companies on Thursday to call for changes to their fintech operations, the central bank said, as Beijing ramps up scrutiny on monopolistic practises in the country’s tech industry.

Regulators have been taking China’s tech firms to task to curtail the reach of private companies into the public’s daily finances, with 34 major companies warned earlier this month to abide by anti-competition guidelines.

That group, which included Chinese search engine Baidu and gaming giant Tencent, was told to heed the case of Alibaba, after the e-commerce giant was hit with a record $2.78 billion fine by China’s market watchdog for abusing its dominant market position.

Alibaba’s huge fine was held up as an example to others.. Photo: Anthony Wallace/AFP

Those summoned by financial regulators on Thursday again included Tencent and TikTok parent ByteDance.

Others in the meeting included financial businesses affiliated with major brands such as e-commerce giant JD.com, food delivery platform Meituan, ride-hailing company Didi and travel platform CTrip.

The financial regulators present included the People’s Bank of China, which is the country’s central bank, as well as the country’s banking and insurance regulator.

Although internet platform companies “played an important role in improving the efficiency of financial services”, the bank said, regulators warned of problems that needed to be fixed.

For example, some businesses engage in “unfair competition”, go beyond their scope of their license or have poor corporate governance.

Influential businesses such as those summoned are to “take the lead” in correcting their practices, while companies are to conduct “self-examination” in line with the law, the bank said.

It added that “improper connections between payment tools and other financial products should be broken”, and so should any “information monopoly”.

Fintech firm Ant Group, an Alibaba affiliate whose planned record-shattering $35 billion Hong Kong-Shanghai IPO was shelved late last year, said this month it would comply with an overhaul outlined by regulators.

AFP