EQS-News / 14/01/2021 / 17:22 UTC+8 
Competition among the Three Major Merchant Acquiring Platforms in the Mobile Payment Era 
 
China e-payment industry originated in 2003 when Taobao rolled out Alipay in an effort to solve the problem of "credit 
lack" among online shopping consumers. By 2009, Alipay had become the largest third-party payment platform with over 
200 million users in the world. 
 
Shao Xiaofeng, the former President of Alipay, expressed his ambition in an interview. "Though Alipay's absolute 
transaction value is lower than PayPal's, Alipay is expected to overtake PayPal within three years". 
 
Alipay at that time assumed PayPal to be its sole competitor, while another tech giant, Tencent, was sneaking into the 
online payment market with its fintech arm, Tenpay. 
 
In July 2009, Tenpay held a conference to announce its new brand proposition, which was considered to be a significant 
milestone according to Luke Liu, the General Manager of Tenpay. "We will make online payments penetrate every aspect of 
people's lives", said Liu. 
 
As the first leader of Tenpay, Luke Liu made notable contributions from its foundation to its entry into online 
payments. No one could believe Tenpay would threaten Alipay's leading position as Tenpay was only considered to be a 
strategic move to monetize Tencent QQ (an instant messenger developed by Tencent) traffic. 
 
The turning point of the competition came in 2011 when Alipay and Tenpay were both granted the first series of online 
payment licenses from PBOC. Luke Liu, a game changer in the industry, saw greater opportunity in the industry with 
national regulations, despite the huge gap between Tenpay and Alipay in terms of transaction volume. 
 
Tenpay promptly integrated WeChat Pay into WeChat, Tencent's key product, after obtaining the license. During the 
Spring Festival of 2014, WeChat Pay took the lion share of the market from Alipay with the unexpected success of 
WeChat's red packet promotion. With the high penetration rate of WeChat, WeChat Pay subsequently became a popular 
payment mechanism for everyone in China. 
 
Shortly after Tenpay receiving payment license, Lai Zhiming, a Harvard business school graduate with experience in both 
investments and TMT joined Tencent and took the helm from Luke Liu as the new General Manager of Tenpay. 
 
From then on, the Chinese mobile payment market officially ushered in a period of duopoly. 
 
From hot war to cold war 
 
The success of WeChat Pay is attributed to the vast user traffic of Tencent (00700.HK), especially in the mobile 
market. The social networking applications including WeChat and QQ are regarded as two "must-have" apps on mobile 
phones. Mobile payments are typically small-amounted and commonly used in countless offline situations, which aligns 
particularly well with social networking-based applications like WeChat Pay. 
 
The advantage of WeChat Pay at that moment resemble what Pinduoduo (PDD.US) has today, which is attributed to the high 
penetration into lower-tier cities. The time spending on WeChat was significant among rural youngsters and retirees. By 
contrast, Alipay is difficult to compete with WeChat Pay in lower-tier markets due to its short of social networking 
feature 
 
After WeChat entered the payments market, Alipay also started to make efforts in "social networking". As part of its 
efforts to compete with WeChat, it rolled out several social events, such as "Wu Fu", a lucky card collecting game, 
which at one time dramatically increased Alipay's penetration rate. However, to date, the mobile payment landscape has 
remained largely unchanged. 
 
The reason is simple. For most people who are already accustomed to WeChat Pay, it is unrealistic to alter their 
payment habits in the short term, which also explains why it was so difficult for Alipay to succeed in the social 
networking space. The bitter competition in the China mobile payment industry did not last long. Alipay continues to 
maintain its dominant lead in market share, though WeChat Pay remains close behind. 
 
In addition to this two-party duopoly, there are other payment platforms, such as JD Pay, Baidu Wallet and E-Wallet 
developed for satisfying vary payment habits of consumers. 
No matter which payment mechanisms the customers chose, it's only a way of receiving payment from merchants' 
perspective. A popular Chinese internet saying goes, "only kids make choices; adults want it all". There is a market 
demand has given rise to the emergence of a business model of third-party platforms, which dedicated to providing 
integrated payment services to small and medium-sized merchants. With a simple integrated QR code, merchants can 
quickly and conveniently collect payments from various payment gateways and banks. 
 
The presence of third-party payment collection platforms indirectly enables a "harmonious coexistence" among various 
players in the Chinese mobile payment market. 
 
With a relatively long-term balance reached in the mobile payment market, the competition between Alipay and WeChat Pay 
has turned into a "Cold War" targeting to micro and small merchants. 
 
Alipay launched a comprehensive localization strategy and vigorously sought offline breakthroughs leveraging local 
platforms such as Ele.me and Koubei, while WeChat Pay launched its "National Small Stall Fireworks Plan", providing 
supports to over 50 million micro and small merchants in four directions including online and offline integration, 
subsidies and benefits, merchant education and operational sustainability. 
 
The transition from a heated battle to an all-out cold war appropriately summarizes the development of the China mobile 
payment industry. 
 
The Race into QR Codes 
 
Due to historical reasons, many third-party merchant acquires serving as "peaceful messengers" started off as POS 
providers. 
 
A third-party merchant service provider initially start with its national bank acquiring business. The consumers make 
payments via POS terminals to merchants. With the development of mobile payment, QR code payments rapidly gained 
popularity due to its simplicity and convenience. After a brief suspension in 2014, the Payment & Clearing Association 
of China (PCAC) issued the "Standards for Barcode Payments" in 2016, which marked the official launch of QR code 
payments. 
 
Currently, there are three major listed merchant acquiring platforms in China: Lakala (300773.SZ), Huifu (09923.HK) and 
Yeahka (09923.HK). In terms of transaction volume, the A-share listed Lakala ranked top, followed by Huifu, while 
Yeahka, which went public in Hong Kong in 2020, is the fastest growing among the three. 
 
In fact, China's merchant acquiring market is intensely competitive  as its technical barrier to entry is not high, and 
market expansion mainly relies on merchant resources. As of the end of 2019, a total of 33 institutions were granted 
national bank card acquiring license. The overall market is relatively fragmented and highly competitive, where 
UnionPay, Lakala, Huifu and Yeahka are the leading players with high market share. 
 
The core reason behind Yeahka's rapid growth in the fierce competition is the Company accurately seized developmental 
window of opportunity of QR payments in China. According to Oliver Wyman, it only took 7 years from 2013-2019 for the 
QR payment volume grew to RMB9.5 trillion from scratch. 
 
The QR code payment business is expected to maintain rapid growth over the next four years, representing a CARG of 
36.9% from 2019 to 2023. The transaction volume of QR code payments is expected to reach RMB33.4 trillion in 2023, 
which will be 1.76 times bigger than app-based bank card payments. 
 
In this fast-growing segment, Yeahka ranked second among the top 5 independent non-bank QR code payment service 
providers in terms of QR code payment transaction count in 2019, with 14% market share. The top 5 companies occupies a 
market share of 55% in terms of transaction count. 
 
It is worth noting that Yeahka was founded by Luke Liu, the former General Manager of Tenpay, after his leaving from 
Tencent. In 2010, Alipay was the first to tap into the QR code payment business, and Luke  lead Tenpay to immediately 
enter the market with his assessment that QR code payment is another blue ocean to capture. 
 
Due to policy reasons, QR code payments were not officially launched until 2016. However, Yeahka has greatly benefited 
from the fast-growing QR code payment market, thanks to Luke Liu's early strategic planning. Yeahka's rapid growth is 
definitely not accidental. 
 
In terms of market trends, QR code payments still have extensive potential to grow in the future. Only by taking a 
dominant position in the QR code payment market can merchant acquires stand out from the competition. At present, 
Yeahka has a leading position in this aspect. 
 
SaaS payment platforms 
 
At "88 Media Exchange Conference" held by Alipay in 2019, Yao Zhong, the General Manager of Alipay's IoT business unit, 
said, "The challenges we are facing at this moment is not only related to payment, but depth business model at the 
upcoming stage, that is, how we help merchants operate business well." 
 
This reveals the future development trend of the payment industry--mobile payment seems to be a business with ability 
to generate strong cash flow, but its core value hides in the data. 
 
From front end, mobile payments simply requires exchange of money and goods between consumers and merchants. However, 
at the back end of mobile payments, there are multiple intermediaries, such as bankcard issuers, payment institutions, 
and bankcard clearing institutions, all get involved in this transaction. The commitment of Mobile payment service 
providers to simplifying merchants' bill collection procedures and improving merchants' operating efficiency. 
 
 
 
Under the traditional business model, it's common practice for merchant acquiring platforms charge their merchants 0.3 
- 0.5% service fee per transaction. As a result, only enlarging business scale is the core success factor for merchant 

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January 14, 2021 04:22 ET (09:22 GMT)