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Jack Ma defends Alibaba amid fakes row
by Staff Writers
Hong Kong (AFP) Feb 3, 2015


LendingClub, Alibaba ink deal on financing
New York Feb 3, 2015 - US startup LendingClub, a leader in so-called peer-to-peer lending, announced a partnership Tuesday with China's Alibaba to be a source of credit for purchases at the online retailer. Under terms of the deal, LendingClub will be "the exclusive solution for point of sale business financing for up to $300,000" for Alibaba's US business buyers. US small businesses will be able to borrow using a streamlined process at interest rates starting at 0.5 percent. The arrangement will offer the credit to US businesses purchasing goods from China-based suppliers on Alibaba.com. "We share Alibaba.com's commitment to enabling frictionless global ecommerce by US small businesses," said Lending Club founder and chief executive Renaud Laplanche. "We believe that access to affordable credit through Alibaba.com and the Lending Club platform can become a competitive advantage for small businesses across America." Lending Club, which facilitates loans between borrowers and investors, made a successful Wall Street debut in December. Its market value is now some $7.2 billion. Founded in 2007 and led by Frenchman Laplanche, 44, LendingClub arranges peer-to-peer credit deals, matching investors with borrowers under its computerized framework rather than providing loans itself. The business generated loans worth more than $4 billion in the first nine months of 2014. Board members include former US Treasury Secretary Lawrence Summers and former Morgan Stanley chief executive John Mack.

Alibaba founder Jack Ma has defended his company's reputation after authorities accused it of allowing "illegal" actions on its multi-billion-dollar online shopping platform, saying he does not want it to be seen as a hub for fake products.

The Chinese billionaire spoke out after a powerful Beijing regulator delivered an unusual dressing down of the prominent company, publishing a survey saying only about a third of products sampled from Alibaba's consumer-to-consumer marketplace Taobao were genuine.

"We don't want (to be) misunderstood by the world that we are not transparent. We don't want (to be) misunderstood by the world that Taobao is a platform for selling fake products," Ma said late Monday on a visit to Hong Kong.

In rare public criticism of a domestic firm, the State Administration for Industry & Commerce (SAIC) last week accused Alibaba of allowing "illegal operations" to flourish on its websites, and told its executives to "overcome arrogance."

The SAIC, charged with maintaining market order in China, took aim at Taobao -- which is estimated to hold more than 90 percent of the domestic market -- as well as Tmall.com, a business-to-consumer platform.

Ma said Monday that the company is listening to regulators and pushing for change, adding that the e-commerce giant has sent 400 people to jail for selling fake products.

"Doing business anywhere with any regulatory (bodies) you will have a problem, you have to talk, communicate, listen, change and push. This is what we are doing," Ma said.

The comments come after Ma met on Friday with SAIC director Zhang Mao, which could signal a de-escalation of the dispute.

Alibaba is often described as the Chinese version of eBay, but it surpassed the US company in China more than a decade ago, essentially forcing it to retreat in the Chinese market.

Ma, a former English teacher, regained the title of Asia's richest man with the anticipated listing of his firm's Zhejiang Ant Small and Micro Financial Services Group, worth $50 billion, according to Bloomberg Billionaires Index Tuesday.

The financial services firm is mulling a private share sale before an IPO in 2016, Bloomberg reported, citing sources familiar with the company.

Ma said Monday it was "still a bit early" to reveal detailed plans for the company known as Ant Financial, but indicated that a listing for this year was off the cards.

A separate Chinese wealth survey -- magazine Hurun Report's Global Rich List 2015 -- said Ma had been surpassed by solar energy tycoon Li Hejun as China's richest man, with a fortune of $26 billion. Hurun put Ma's wealth at $24.5 billion.

Ma and Hong Kong tycoon Li Ka-shing have been vying for the title of the richest man in Asia in the past couple of months, with Li losing the title in December after holding it since 2012.


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