Compliance
Compliance Corner: Tencent, Alibaba, SAMR

The latest compliance news: regulatory developments, punishments, guidance, permissions and new product and service offerings.
SAMR, Alibaba, Tencent
Alibaba – the Chinese
e-commerce conglomerate operating in areas including wealth
management – and fellow Chinese tech and entertainment group
Tencent have been
fined for breaching anti-monopoly rules.
The groups, along with a number of other firms, have been
punished by The State Administration for Market Regulation
(SAMR), the regulator is reported (Reuters, 10 July) to
have said. SAMR released a list of 28 deals that violated the
rules. Five involved units of Alibaba, including a 2021 purchase
of equity in its subsidiary, the Youku Tudou streaming platform.
Tencent was involved in 12 of the transactions on SAMR's
list.
Reuters said the firms could not immediately be reached
for comment.
Authorities in Beijing have been
cracking down on down on supposedly bad practices in China's
tech sector, along with other business areas such as after-hours
private education, coming as a surprise to international
investors and prompting concerns from renowned investors such as
George Soros. At the same time, anti-monopoly actions are also
common in the US and European Union (the EU, for example, has
gone after big techs such as Google). See another example of
regulatory controversies,
here.
An affiliate of Alibaba, Ant Group, which provides financial
services to the Chinese market including wealth management, has
partnered with Vanguard, the giant US asset management house.