TIMELINE-China takes steps to ease up on regulatory crackdown as economy slows
By Selena Li
HONG KONG, June 9 (Reuters) - Beijing has given tentative
approval for Ant Group to revive its initial public offering
(IPO) in Shanghai and Hong Kong, two sources told Reuters on
Thursday, the biggest sign yet of a cooling of Beijing's tough
stance on the technology sector.
Ant, an affiliate of Chinese e-commerce behemoth Alibaba
Group Holding Ltd (BABA), aims to file the preliminary
prospectus for the offering as soon as next month, said the
sources.
China in recent months has changed its tone and tack towards
the regulatory crackdown campaigns it waged against a wide range
of industries from technology to property since late 2020, as it
seeks to boost an economy hurt by COVID-19 lockdowns.
The shift in messaging has ignited hopes for companies and
investors that the worst is over, though jitters remain.
Here is a timeline of key events underscoring the easing of
China's regulatory crackdown since the beginning of this year:
Feb. 10: China's cyberspace watchdog said it had held a
symposium with Chinese tech giants in January which they said
had given the industry a "clearer understanding" of how to
pursue future development and confidence amid a new regulatory
landscape.
March 16: Chinese Vice Premier Liu He, China's economic
tsar, urged the rollout of market-friendly policies to support
the economy and caution in introducing measures that risked
hurting markets, boosting battered shares in China and Hong
Kong.
April 11: China's gaming regulator granted publishing
licenses to 45 games belonging to the likes of Baidu (BIDU)
and XD Inc's (XDNCF) "Party Star," ending a nine-month freeze
that had dealt a blow to many of the country's tech companies.
April 29: China's powerful Politburo, in a meeting chaired
by Chinese President Xi Jinping, said it will step up policy
support for the world's second-largest economy, including its
so-called platform economy.
May 15: Chinese financial authorities allowed a further cut
in mortgage loan interest rates for some home buyers, in another
push to prop up its property market and revive a flagging engine
of the world's second-largest economy.
May 16: Authorities asked three financially healthy major
private Chinese property developers to issue bonds to help boost
market sentiment, two sources with direct knowledge of the
matter told Reuters.
May 24: China's financial regulators pledged to keep credit
growth stable in the property sector and help home buyers
affected by COVID-19 outbreaks to defer their mortgage payments,
the central bank said in a statement.
May 17: China's vice-premier, Liu, told a meeting convened
by the country's top political consultative body that the
government supported the development of the sector and public
listings for technology companies. Tech executives who attended
the meeting included founders of search engine company Baidu (BIDU)
and mobile security software maker Qihoo 360.
June 7: China's gaming regulator granted publishing licenses
to 60 games.
June 8: Reuters reported, citing sources, that China's Didi
is in talks with state-backed Sinomach Automobile
to buy a third of its electric-vehicle unit,
signalling the ride-hailer's regulatory troubles are in the rear
view mirror as it focuses on growth.
(Reporting by Selena Li in Hong Kong
Editing by Brenda Goh and Matthew Lewis)