How Ant Group Became the Biggest Fintech Company in the World

Alibaba built the “Amazon of the East.” Now, its fintech spinoff is set to be the biggest IPO of the year.

Marc Rubinstein
Marker

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Ant Financial logo on a building.
A logo hangs on a building of Ant Group, a leading provider of financial services technology in China, on July 23, 2020 in Hangzhou, Zhejiang Province of China. Photo: Wu Jun/VCG/Getty Images

In an IPO market that’s on fire, the biggest is yet to come: Ant Group, a Chinese online payments giant, created by Alibaba founder, Jack Ma. The company filed for its IPO this week and is expected to be the most valuable company ever to go public on a global stock exchange. The company plans to sell 10% of its shares on Shanghai’s Nasdaq-like exchange and 5% on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange, according to MarketWatch.

The Chinese company is looking to raise a record-breaking $30 billion in its IPO, which is expected to happen by October (for context, Saudi Arabia’s oil giant, Aramco, raised $25.6 billion in its IPO last December).

Ant Group is the fintech to beat all fintechs, and the success of its IPO will be determined by how the market perceives its tech relative to its fin. The company is the ultimate mashup between Stripe, PayPal, Apple Pay, Venmo, FICO, and any of the multiple fintech companies in the U.S. that offer lending, savings, and insurance products. While the stocks of tech companies have risen strongly over the past few months with the Nasdaq up roughly 25% above where it was in February, the stocks…

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