China Daily (Hong Kong)

Rules rein in shadow banking

Crackdown sees non-bond investment­s, interbank assets fall in first five months

- By JIANG XUEQING jiangxueqi­ng @chinadaily.com.cn

The tightening of financial regulation in China has led to a sharp decline in shadow banking since the start of this year.

According to the China Banking and Insurance Regulatory Commission, the financial sector has continued to consolidat­e efforts to return to its fundamenta­l purpose of serving the real economy.

Statistics from the regulator show that as of the end of May, interbank assets dropped by 2.6 percent year-on-year, and non-bond investment­s fell 7 percent.

The value of interbank wealth management products declined further by 1.2 trillion yuan ($177 billion) during the first five months of 2018, following a drop of 3.4 trillion yuan last year.

Sheng Songcheng, an adviser to the People’s Bank of China, the central bank, said: “At the beginning of this year, regulators made it clear that they included regulation of risks associated with shadow banking and cross-sector financial products into the priorities of this year’s crackdown on the financial market. The business of trust loans and entrusted loans has shrunk significan­tly since January.”

The size of new trust loans and new entrusted loans dropped by 131.5 billion yuan and 179 billion yuan monthon-month in January, respective­ly. The growth in these two types of loans remained roughly negative for a few months thereafter, Sheng said.

The China Banking Associatio­n said in a report issued in July: “The Chinese banking sector will make a transition from high-speed growth to high-quality developmen­t. From 2018 to 2019, the banking sector will continue the developmen­t trend of last year, with positive changes taking place in its asset and liability structure. The size of interbank assets, interbank wealth management, and investment via special purpose vehicles may shrink further, and the growth in such business may slow down further.

“As the total size of banks’ off-balance-sheet business will keep falling, their operation will become more sensible and standardiz­ed. With increased risk and compliance awareness, rule violations and regulatory arbitrage activities will largely decrease, and banks will become more rational in dealing with their urge for scale expansion.”

On July 20, the CBIRC announced draft measures for the supervisio­n and administra­tion of the asset management business of commercial banks. Also on that day, the People’s Bank of China announced a notice further clarifying relevant matters concerning the guidance of the financial asset management business of financial institutio­ns. The the aim is to tighten regulatory oversight of asset management services and products to contain risks more effectivel­y and better protect the interests of investors.

“Growth of shadow banking assets will remain constraine­d in 2018 due to tight regulation­s. These include banks’ offbalance sheet wealth management products and asset management products originated by non-bank financial institutio­ns, which were the fastest-growing shadow banking products in 2015. Trust loans and entrusted loans, the remaining growth driver in 2017, are also under regulators’ spotlight,” said global credit ratings agency Moody’s in its Quarterly China Shadow Banking Monitor report issued in May.

As of the end of 2017, the balance of banks’ wealth management products stood at 29.54 trillion yuan, according to the CBIRC.

The regulator has been strengthen­ing supervisio­n since 2017. As a result, the asset management business of commercial banks is showing a more steady and sustainabl­e trend of developmen­t.

As of the end of June, the balance of nonprincip­al protected wealth management products was 21 trillion yuan, falling from 22.17 trillion yuan at the end of 2017.

About 70 percent of the wealth management funds are invested in standard assets such as bonds, deposits and monetary market instrument­s, while about 15 percent of the funds are invested in nonstandar­d debt assets, according to the regulator.

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