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Beijing Fines Alibaba, Tencent for Disclosure Violations

The China State Administration for Market Regulation, which is responsible for stopping monopolistic behavior, has fined Alibaba, Tencent and numerous other companies.


Law firms in China have heeded a request to tone down the language used to describe 'China risks' in IPO application documents, but some say the move could provoke queries from the US regulator.
A Chinese national flag flutters outside the China Securities Regulatory Commission building on Financial Street in Beijing. Photo: Reuters.

China’s State Administration for Market Regulation (SAMR) has hit technology giants Alibaba and Tencent with fines for failing to comply with transaction disclosure rules that are part of anti-monopoly laws, the SAMR said on Sunday.

Numerous other companies were also named as having violated the rules in the same announcement.

The SAMR released a list of 28 unreported deals that violated the rules. Five involved units of Alibaba, including a 2021 purchase of equity in one of its subsidiaries, the Youku Tudou streaming platform.

 

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Tencent was involved in 12 of the transactions on the SAMR list.

The firms could not immediately be reached for comment.

China’s tech sector has been one of the main targets of a crackdown on monopolistic practices that started in late 2020.

Under the anti-monopoly law, the maximum potential fine in each case is 500,000 renminbi (US$74,688).

  • Reuters, with editing by Neal McGrath

 

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Neal McGrath

Neal McGrath is a New York-based financial journalist. Neal started his career covering the Asia-Pacific region for the Economist Intelligence Unit, then joined Asian Business magazine. He's subsequently held a variety of editorial positions covering business, economics, finance and sustainability. Neal has lived and worked in Hong Kong, Singapore, Germany and the US.

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