<p>With a name belying its giant ambitions, China's Ant Group on Tuesday launched a history-making $34 billion IPO in Hong Kong and Shanghai.</p>.<p>Backed by Jack Ma, China's richest man who founded the Alibaba e-commerce empire from his bedroom two decades ago, Ant is a financial technology titan that is stitched into the everyday life of hundreds of millions of Chinese people.</p>.<p>But outside China it is less well known. So what is Ant?</p>.<p>Ant Group is the parent company of Alipay, China's pioneering digital payments firm, which was founded by Ma in 2004.</p>.<p>A former teacher, Ma started in digital sales with the Alibaba e-commerce giant but his ambitions then turned to the potential for simplifying personal finance in China.</p>.<p>He envisioned a cashless society based on "trust and credit" where buyers' cash is held in escrow by Alipay for merchants to send their goods with a guarantee of return for any unhappy customers.</p>.<p>In interviews, Ma likes to recount how the start of Alipay was met with derision, saying: "Everybody said 'Jack this is the most stupid model we've ever seen, nobody will use it.'"</p>.<p>It now claims one billion users, in part thanks to Ma's gift for navigating China's red tape and gatekeepers.</p>.<p>From payments for food deliveries, instant loans to micro-investment and insurance, Ant has mushroomed into now integral part of everyday Chinese life.</p>.<p>The corporate spiel says the Ant name derives from the company mantra of empowering ordinary consumers: "We believe small is beautiful, small is powerful."</p>.<p>Ant's reach is astonishing.</p>.<p>It is the world-largest digital payments platform, claiming 711 million monthly users on the Alipay app using more than 80 million stores.</p>.<p>That equated to $17.6 trillion in payments as of June this year, 25 times more than US giant Paypal.</p>.<p>The company is leading the line on blockchain technology and says it has a capacity to match one billion transactions a day on the so-called ANTchain.</p>.<p>Its financial products have revolutionised personal finance across a vast country where around 10 percent of the population remains unbanked.</p>.<p>The Alipay app launched in 2013 a "Yu'e Bao" service, which allows ordinary people to play money markets from their e-wallet.</p>.<p>The "leftover treasure" concept gave entry to investments of as little as one yuan, briefly becoming the world's biggest fund with nearly $200 billion in circulation.</p>.<p>Meanwhile, Sesame Credit gives quicktime loans to individuals and small businesses, and Bangnitou -- an artifical intelligence powered investment adviser -- hoovered up 200,000 customers within six months of its launch.</p>.<p>Armed with the data of hundreds of millions of people, boundary-pushing AI and pockets soon to be stuffed with IPO cash, Ant says it intends to keep innovating and rolling into new markets.</p>.<p>Domestically, Alipay is pushing facial recognition payments technology.</p>.<p>Abroad, the vast, young tech-friendly populations of Southeast Asia and India are seen as fertile ground for its products.</p>.<p>But there are challenges ahead. Tencent's WeChat, the second player in China's digital payments market, is gobbling up market share.</p>.<p>Meanwhile, global trust in Chinese technology has taken a hit with fears of data harvesting on behalf of China's ruling Communist Party. That could forestall Ant's march.</p>.<p>But seemingly not that of Jack Ma. China's richest man stands to make around $27.8 billion from his 8.8 percent stake in Ant if the share sale goes to plan.</p>
<p>With a name belying its giant ambitions, China's Ant Group on Tuesday launched a history-making $34 billion IPO in Hong Kong and Shanghai.</p>.<p>Backed by Jack Ma, China's richest man who founded the Alibaba e-commerce empire from his bedroom two decades ago, Ant is a financial technology titan that is stitched into the everyday life of hundreds of millions of Chinese people.</p>.<p>But outside China it is less well known. So what is Ant?</p>.<p>Ant Group is the parent company of Alipay, China's pioneering digital payments firm, which was founded by Ma in 2004.</p>.<p>A former teacher, Ma started in digital sales with the Alibaba e-commerce giant but his ambitions then turned to the potential for simplifying personal finance in China.</p>.<p>He envisioned a cashless society based on "trust and credit" where buyers' cash is held in escrow by Alipay for merchants to send their goods with a guarantee of return for any unhappy customers.</p>.<p>In interviews, Ma likes to recount how the start of Alipay was met with derision, saying: "Everybody said 'Jack this is the most stupid model we've ever seen, nobody will use it.'"</p>.<p>It now claims one billion users, in part thanks to Ma's gift for navigating China's red tape and gatekeepers.</p>.<p>From payments for food deliveries, instant loans to micro-investment and insurance, Ant has mushroomed into now integral part of everyday Chinese life.</p>.<p>The corporate spiel says the Ant name derives from the company mantra of empowering ordinary consumers: "We believe small is beautiful, small is powerful."</p>.<p>Ant's reach is astonishing.</p>.<p>It is the world-largest digital payments platform, claiming 711 million monthly users on the Alipay app using more than 80 million stores.</p>.<p>That equated to $17.6 trillion in payments as of June this year, 25 times more than US giant Paypal.</p>.<p>The company is leading the line on blockchain technology and says it has a capacity to match one billion transactions a day on the so-called ANTchain.</p>.<p>Its financial products have revolutionised personal finance across a vast country where around 10 percent of the population remains unbanked.</p>.<p>The Alipay app launched in 2013 a "Yu'e Bao" service, which allows ordinary people to play money markets from their e-wallet.</p>.<p>The "leftover treasure" concept gave entry to investments of as little as one yuan, briefly becoming the world's biggest fund with nearly $200 billion in circulation.</p>.<p>Meanwhile, Sesame Credit gives quicktime loans to individuals and small businesses, and Bangnitou -- an artifical intelligence powered investment adviser -- hoovered up 200,000 customers within six months of its launch.</p>.<p>Armed with the data of hundreds of millions of people, boundary-pushing AI and pockets soon to be stuffed with IPO cash, Ant says it intends to keep innovating and rolling into new markets.</p>.<p>Domestically, Alipay is pushing facial recognition payments technology.</p>.<p>Abroad, the vast, young tech-friendly populations of Southeast Asia and India are seen as fertile ground for its products.</p>.<p>But there are challenges ahead. Tencent's WeChat, the second player in China's digital payments market, is gobbling up market share.</p>.<p>Meanwhile, global trust in Chinese technology has taken a hit with fears of data harvesting on behalf of China's ruling Communist Party. That could forestall Ant's march.</p>.<p>But seemingly not that of Jack Ma. China's richest man stands to make around $27.8 billion from his 8.8 percent stake in Ant if the share sale goes to plan.</p>