Sometimes being a fintech company in China feels like playing a game where the rules keep changing mid-match. Just ask Qfin Holdings Inc. (QFIN) (3660.HK), which is learning this lesson the hard way as regulatory tightening and a sluggish economy finally crack its previously impressive resilience.
The online loan facilitator just posted results that would make any CFO wince. Third-quarter revenue slipped 0.2% year-over-year to 5.2 billion yuan ($731 million), marking the first contraction for that metric in more than two years. Net profit took an even bigger hit, falling 17% to 1.4 billion yuan. But here's the kicker: management capped off this underwhelming performance by projecting net profit could plummet as much as 49% in the fourth quarter. In the best-case scenario, that gives them just a 1% profit increase for all of 2025.
This represents quite the mood swing from the start of the year, when Qfin was riding high on surging 2024 profits and projecting strength ahead. The company even rebranded itself from Qifu to Qfin, presumably to emphasize its fintech credentials by inserting "fin" into its name. For context, the company originally launched as 360 Finance when it debuted on the New York exchange in 2018, nodding to its connections with security software maker Qihoo 360.
Regulatory Reality Bites
Name changes are easy. Navigating China's evolving regulatory landscape? That's considerably harder. On October 1st, authorities rolled out a comprehensive new set of regulations for financial institutions, with a particular emphasis on risk management. For Qfin, that means tightening borrower acceptance criteria at the expense of loan growth, and boosting provisions against potential defaults. Neither is particularly great for the bottom line.
"As a leading player in the industry, we have always held ourselves to the highest compliance standards with no exception this time," CEO Wu Haisheng explained on the earnings call. "While these measures may temporarily impact our loan volume and profitability, we believe that prioritizing value for users will eventually strengthen their trust and help us maintain more sustainable and resilient growth over the long term."
The October regulations are just the latest chapter in an ongoing story. China's private financial sector has faced a steady stream of regulatory updates since the years before the pandemic, reflecting authorities' determination to shield the economy from risks associated with reckless lending. For Qfin and its peers, it means constantly adapting to new rules in an industry where the regulatory goalposts never stop moving.
Economic Headwinds Compound the Pain
Then there's the broader economic picture, which isn't doing lenders any favors. As Chinese consumers and businesses pull back on spending and borrowing, growth becomes elusive for lenders across the board, whether private or state-owned. The country's aggregate bank loans contracted sharply in October from the previous month, even after Beijing introduced interest subsidies for businesses in select consumer sectors to jumpstart economic activity.
Weakening borrower financial health is also elevating default risks, making robust risk management critical for lenders regardless of regulatory requirements. Qfin's third-quarter numbers illustrate these challenges with uncomfortable clarity. Total loan facilitation and origination volume grew just 1% year-over-year and actually shrank 1.4% from the previous quarter. Meanwhile, the ratio of loans delinquent for 90 days or longer crept up to 2.09% at the end of September from 1.97% three months earlier.
The Provision Problem
As conditions deteriorated, Qfin's provisions against bad loans skyrocketed. Here's where the business model gets interesting: Qfin operates as a middleman between borrowers and banks, which theoretically insulates it from default risk. Reality, however, tells a different story. When a "capital-heavy" loan that Qfin facilitates defaults, the company must pay the original lender all outstanding interest and principal. Qfin also funds certain loans through trusts and a subsidiary, bearing full credit risk on those. Management attributed the massive jump in provisions to increased volume in both loan categories.
On the earnings call, executives noted that Qfin adjusts its mix of capital-heavy loans versus loans without full-payment guarantees based on economic conditions. The plan for the fourth quarter? Increase the proportion of lower-risk loans to reduce credit exposure.
Standing Out in a Struggling Sector
Qfin isn't alone in navigating these headwinds. Competitor FinVolution (FINV.US) also reported a year-over-year decrease in transaction volume for the third quarter along with rising provisions. But FinVolution managed to grow both revenue and net profit, largely thanks to expanding international operations, an avenue Qfin hasn't yet explored.
Despite the challenges, Qfin remains a highly profitable company with healthy margins. Advanced technology helps keep operating costs down, and its AI and data analytics services—an area where it leverages its Qihoo 360 connections—make it an attractive partner for banks, potentially giving Qfin leverage in pricing negotiations.
For example, Qfin is integrating an AI credit agent into its Focus Pro platform. The technology can dramatically streamline loan-approval processes by assessing borrower risk in seconds using massive data volumes and large language-model capabilities. According to CEO Wu, a trial run drew "very positive" customer feedback.
Market Verdict: Not Impressed
The stock market's reaction to the quarterly report was swift and harsh. Hong Kong-listed shares plunged about 18% over four days. For the year, Qfin's stock is down more than 50% in Hong Kong, massively underperforming the 32% gain in the benchmark Hang Seng Index. The shares now trade at a bargain-basement price-to-earnings ratio of just 2.7, even lower than FinVolution's depressed 3.3. That valuation screams that investors remain deeply skeptical of this sector, despite most companies managing to stay profitable in a tough environment.
Qfin has genuine strengths—technological advantages, solid margins, and innovative AI capabilities. But its heavy exposure to regulatory uncertainty and economic volatility are clear deterrents for investors. And those realities don't look like they're changing anytime soon, leaving the company to prove it can navigate choppy waters while the market watches with deep skepticism.