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Alibaba Group Holding’s offices in Hangzhou, China. The group’s financial affiliate has seen its Yu’E Bao money market fund lure about 325 million Chinese investors since its launch four years ago. Image Credit: Bloomberg

Shanghai: China’s central bank is urging Alibaba Group Holding Ltd’s financial affiliate to reduce the maximum amount individuals can invest in its Yu’E Bao money-market fund to limit risks to financial markets, people with knowledge of the matter said.

Yu’E Bao, the world’s largest money-market fund, will cut its current 1 million yuan ($145,000; Dh532,335) investment cap by more than half after receiving input from the People’s Bank of China, according to the people, who asked not to be identified discussing sensitive information. The limit may be imposed as soon as this month and will apply to new money inflows, they said.

Owned by Alibaba’s Ant Financial affiliate, Yu’E Bao has since its launch about four years ago lured about 325 million Chinese investors, almost the entire population of the US, as it offered higher returns than bank deposits. The fund’s assets grew to 1.14 trillion yuan by March, topping the size of the JPMorgan US Government Money Market Fund.

Yu’E Bao’s size has spurred concerns about its influence over the nation’s interbank market, where most of its money is invested, and where borrowing costs have soared to a two-year high amid the government’s renewed campaign against leverage. Moody’s Investors Service said in a note last week that Yu’E Bao has been putting more money into longer-maturity assets and liquidity risks will increase if that trend continues.

The PBOC couldn’t immediately comment.

A representative for Tianhong Asset Management Co, which is majority owned by Ant Financial and manages Yu’E Bao funds, said in a text message that transfers by customers into their Yu’E Bao accounts were currently normal, without commenting further. Ant Financial didn’t immediately return an email seeking comment.

“An oversized fund carries significant systemic risks,” said Shi Lei, Beijing-based head of fixed-income research at Ping An Securities Co, adding that regulators were tightening oversight after big redemptions at some money-market funds last year.

Riskier banks

Yu’E Bao — which means “leftover treasure” — was made available through Ant Financial’s Alipay platform with no minimum investment or time frame, and can be used to make credit-card payments and buy products. About 99.7 per cent of Yu’E Bao investors are individuals, according to its annual report, rather than companies or financial intermediaries, as is typically the case at other Chinese money-market funds.

Moody’s expressed concern about Yu’E Bao’s increased holdings of interbank negotiable certificates of deposit, which more than doubled in the first quarter, and included NCDs issued by China’s smaller and riskier banks.

The fund has benefited from a government deleveraging drive that drove up borrowing costs and money-market fund returns. The average seven-day return for Yu’E Bao’s investors was recently an annualised 4.02 per cent, versus 2.52 per cent at the end of November, data from Tianhong’s website show.

America’s recent experience with money-market fund regulation suggests any tightening move on Yu’E Bao could lead to unintendedconsequences. A US overhaul of the industry in October — meant to make money funds safer and more transparent in the wake of the 2008 financial crisis — sparked a $1 trillion (Dh3.67 trillion) exodus from “prime” money funds that buy certificates of deposit and short-term company IOUs. The outflows helped boost commercial paper rates to the highest level since the financial crisis and forced borrowers to search for alternative sources of funding.

Alibaba set to enter Pakistan, signs MoU

Pakistan on Tuesday signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU with Chinese tech giant Alibaba to promote the country’s worldwide exports by Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs) through e-commerce. The agreement was signed by Pakistan’s Commerce Minister Khurram Dastgir and Alibaba’s President Michael Evans along with Douglas Feagin, senior vice-president of Global Business of Ant Financial, on behalf of Alibaba, Dawn newspaper reported.

Alibaba Group’s executive chairman Jack Ma and Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif witnessed the signing ceremony during the PM’s visit to the headquarters of the company. “I am glad my meeting with Jack Ma at the World Economic Forum in January has come to fruition in the shape of the MoU we have just signed,” Sharif said.

Under the terms of the MoU, Alibaba, Ant Financial and TDAP agreed to foster growth of worldwide exports of products by SMEs in Pakistan through e-commerce. Online and offline training programmes for the SMEs would also be conducted by Alibaba in a bid to assist the enterprises with on-boarding on to Alibaba’s platforms and optimising exports through e-commerce.

— IANS