Credit Cards, Ant Financial, and Jack Ma: Sour Grapes or e-Yuan?

Credit Cards, Ant Financial, e-Yuan, prepaid cards

Credit Cards, Ant Financial, and Jack Ma: Sour Grapes or e-Yuan?

Anyone can feel empathic about a bride left at the altar, so imagine how Jack Ma feels after Chinese regulators pulled back on the Ant Financial IPO within hours of the launch. Some may say that Jack does not need codling because he is one of the world’s most prosperous. On the other hand, he earned every dime, and that is what free-enterprise is all about.

Here is a  good read from the Foreign Policy Research Institute that breaks down some complicated issues.

First, the whole issue of a reserve currency is important. Since WWII, the U.S. dollar has been the world’s reserve currency when, according to Investopedia, “delegates from 44 Allied countries met in Bretton Wood, New Hampshire, to come up with a system to manage foreign exchange that would not put any country at a disadvantage.

It was decided that the world’s currencies couldn’t be linked to gold, but they could be linked to the U.S. dollar, which was linked to gold.” For a deeper dive, see the U.S. Department of Treasury’s comments on a reserve currency.

The FPRI supposes that the issue might be Jack.

So, bring in the regulators.

And the yuan…

We will have to see how this materializes. Ant Financial has moved well beyond the Chinese borders. For instance, it is moving deeply into LAC.

But as for Jack Ma, I think he has the inspiration of Dee Hock, one of Visa’s original visionaries.

Overview provided by Brian Riley, Director, Credit Advisory Service at Mercator Advisory Group

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