China's answer to PayPal is coming to the rest of Asia

Alipay is practically ubiquitous in China, with over 450 million users already.
 By 
Yvette Tan
 on 
China's answer to PayPal is coming to the rest of Asia
Mandatory Credit: Photo by MARKKU OJALA/EPA/REX/Shutterstock (8136413b) An Alipay-app on a smartphone screen and Finnair logos at the Helsinki airport, Finland, 27 January 2017. Finnish flag carrier Finnair said it will launch Alipay as an official method of in-flight payments for customers travelling on carrier's Asian route between Helsinki and Shanghai. Alipay is the mobile payment platform of Chinese Ant Financial. Finnair is the first airline to accept payments via Alipay. Finnair accepts Alipay for payments on passenger planes on its Asian routes, Vantaa, Finland - 27 Jan 2017 Credit: OJALA/EPA/REX/Shutterstock

China's biggest mobile payments platform is spreading to the rest of Asia.

Alipay, from ecommerce giant Alibaba, has a whopping 450 million users in China, who use their phones to pay friends, buy stuff online, and even offline at restaurants and merchants.

On Wednesday, Ant Financial, which runs Alipay, announced its merger with HelloPay.

HelloPay is the three-year-old payment platform created by ecommerce site, Lazada, which has been dubbed the "Amazon of Southeast Asia."

Last year, Alibaba bought a controlling stake in Lazada, in a deal worth approximately $1 billion.

Alipay is keen to grow outside of China.

While HelloPay is hardly as ubiquitously used in Southeast Asia as Alipay is in China, the merger should pave the way for Alibaba's plans to spread Alipay outside of China.

However, the new localised Alipay platforms in the region aren't compatible with the main Alipay platform. That means users in China wouldn't be able to pay in Southeast Asia, and vice versa.

HelloPay's country-specific versions will be rebranded as Alipay Singapore, Alipay Malaysia, Alipay Indonesia, and Alipay Philippines.

There will be no change for HelloPay’s users and payment partners, confirmed Douglas Feagin, Senior Vice President of Ant Financial, in an emailed statement to Mashable.

This merger follows Ant Financial's keenness to spread globally. Earlier this week, it offered $1.2 billion for US-based Moneygram.

Looks like there's no escaping Alibaba, wherever in the world you might be.

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Yvette Tan

Yvette is a Viral Content Reporter at Mashable Asia. She was previously reporting for BBC's Singapore bureau and Channel NewsAsia.

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