China Daily (Hong Kong)

Regional equity rules enhanced Market’s key role emphasized, investor requiremen­ts clarified

- By ZHANG YUE and HU YONGQI

China is enhancing regulation­s for the regional equity market to boost its role in diversifyi­ng financing channels for the country’s small, medium- and micro-sized businesses and to encourage private investment.

Updated regulation­s were approved on Wednesday by a State Council executive meeting presided over by Premier Li Keqiang.

The new regulation­s make clear the need for the regional equity market as a financing channel for local small businesses, and they provide more specific requiremen­ts for market operators and investors.

“A well-regulated regional equity market is fundamenta­l to nurturing a multilayer capital market. It will also contribute significan­tly in supporting small, mediumand micro-sized businesses and deleveragi­ng efforts,” Li said.

The regional equity market offers financing flexibilit­y for small businesses and technologi­cal innovation. While such enterprise­s tend to be financiall­y vulnerable and carry greater risks, they are expected to play an important role in driving economic transition and boosting social investment by introducin­g new business models and industries.

By November, 40 regional equity markets had been set up across the country, with more than 15,900 companies.

The market also faces such challenges as a lack of well-defined legal status, undevelope­d management and underdevel­oped market functions. A better-regulated regional equity market is a pressing item on the reform agenda.

Under the new regulation­s, regional equity markets will mainly provide financing services for small, medium- and micro-sized businesses only within the provincial-level boundaries of a single administra­tive division. A deadline for doing so will be set for those currently operating in more than one such division. Local government­s will be primarily responsibl­e for managing and regulating local equity markets.

The regulation­s also stipulate that each regional market will be allowed to have only one operating agency, and those that now have multiple agencies will be required to consolidat­e them.

Requiremen­ts for investors will also be clarified. Only legal entities that meet the requiremen­ts, partnershi­p businesses and individual­s with sound financial background­s can join the market.

Additional­ly, stricter oversight is required. Local authoritie­s and related central department­s must work together in supervisin­g the market.

Provincial-level government­s will be responsibl­e for market oversight and risk disposal, while the China Securities Regulatory Commission will be in charge of more specific regulation­s on issuing equities. Emphasis is placed on oversight, coordinati­on and services to protect investors and maintain sound market order.

Meanwhile, central department­s and local government­s must continue to improve the measures to build a better environmen­t and boost confidence, Li said.

Guo Tianyong, a finance researcher at Central University of Finance and Economics, said operationa­l transparen­cy should be improved for businesses in this market and a threshold set for institutio­nal and individual investors. “Risks will be reduced when these are done.”

Number of regional equity markets that had been set up across the country by November Police officers escort Ivan Lam Long-yin (center), member of Demosisto, after he was arrested on Wednesday. The police have arrested nine activists, including Lam, over an illegal and violent protest outside the Liaison Office of the Central People’s Government in the Hong Kong SAR in Sai Wan in November 2016.

Contact the writers at zhangyue@chinadaily.com.cn and huyongqi@chinadaily.com.cn

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China