Ant Group to Refund Investors $2.8tn After $37bn IPO Halted Over Jack Ma 'Regulatory' Criticisms Row

One of the world's largest fintech companies will begin refunding trillions in investments after a row between the company's founder and Chinese authorities, it was revealed on Friday.
Sputnik

Ant Group is set to begin refunding roughly $2.8tn in IPO funds to investors in Shanghai, the company announced on Friday.

The news comes after regulators summoned company founder Jack Ma on Tuesday over comments made in speeches last month, forcing the Shanghai Stock Exchange (SSE) and Hong Kong Stock Exchange (HKEX) to suspend the record listing.

The massive $37bn IPO, larger than Saudi Aramco's $29bn listing, was set to be the world's largest in decades but was cancelled after Ma criticised Chinese regulators at an event in Shanghai.

Chinese Regulators Suspend Record £37bn Ant Group Hong Kong IPO Listing, Citing Concerns
The People's Bank of China's Financial News slammed the comments, stating the Ant Group would have a "significant impact" on China's regulatory landscape and would need to "focus on preventing its evasion of regulation".

Both exchanges said in statements on Tuesday that the Ant Group had failed to meet disclosure requirements due to changes in China's regulatory conditions.

Refunds will be issued up to Monday, including application and brokerage fees as well as deposit rate interests, Pandaily reported.

Roughly 1.55m investors in Hong Kong will be refunded $167.7bn in IPO funds, according to reports. The process will take place from 4 to 6 November and will be organised into two rounds, with Shanghai clients to receive refunds at a later date.

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