The meeting was aimed at requiring every company to heed the warning from the Alibaba case and stop anti-competitive and other illegal behaviors, the regulator said. “Internet platform companies must be in awe of and respect the rules,” it added.
Two days later, financial regulators ordered Ant Group, Ma’s financial tech firm, to overhaul its operations and become a financial holding company supervised by the central bank. That means the Alibaba-affiliate will have to follow rules similar to those applied to traditional Chinese banks and scale down its aspirations to become a dominant force in the tech world.
Beijing has been tightening the screws on China’s tech champions in recent months, part of a regulatory crackdown that President Xi Jinping has described as one of the country’s top priorities for 2021. Last month, Xi urged officials to step up their efforts to regulate online companies to maintain social stability.
The regulators promised on Tuesday to crack down on a range of practices, such as abusing dominant market positions, setting artificially low prices to grab a bigger market share in “community group buying,” using big data to charge consumers different prices, information leakage, and illegal tax-related activities.
In particular, the companies must “take strict precautions against” five behaviors, including the disorderly expansion of capital, monopolizing the market, stifling technology innovation by competitors, abusing internet algorithms, and closing off their digital ecosystems to others.
The regulators required the companies to conduct their own inspections within a month, rectify any shortcomings, and make a public statement of compliance. Officials will continue to track company behavior and any found guilty of breaching the rules will be subject to “heavy punishments,” the SAMR said.