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China fines Caifutong, Tencent’s WeChat Pay operator, for breaking foreign exchange rules

  • Tenpay, also known as Caifutong, was fined 2.8 million yuan for violating foreign exchange regulations, according to SAFE, the nation’s forex gatekeeper
  • The WeChat Pay operator was also reprimanded in late 2020 and mid-2018 for various breaches related to cross-border currency transactions

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WeChat, Uniopay and Alipay mobile app icons are seen on an iPhone. Photo: SCMP Pictures
China has fined Tenpay, an online-payment unit of Tencent Holdings, 2.8 million yuan (US$438,000) for violating foreign exchange rules amid growing regulatory scrutiny of the nation’s fintech industry.
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The unit received warnings last week and was also ordered to rectify its failure to submit relevant materials and for carrying out foreign exchange business beyond the scope of its business registration, according to a statement published by the State Administration of Foreign Exchange (SAFE) branch in Shenzhen.

The latest action represents at least the third reprimand since mid-2018 for the Tencent unit also known as Caifutong, which operates the group’s WeChat Pay system. Together with Ant Group’s Alipay, they dominate more than 90 per cent of the mainland mobile payments market.

“The company has made an improvement plan and the necessary rectifications have been completed,” Tenpay said in a statement on Sunday. “We will further strengthen compliance management under the guidance of the Shenzhen branch of SAFE in future.”

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The penalty came amid a growing list of malpractices highlighted by authorities in their ongoing crackdown on Big Tech. The government this month meted fines to firms including Alibaba Group Holding, Tencent, and Baidu for not disclosing deals going back for years, on top of major crackdowns on monopoly practices and data privacy.
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