Global Times

Overseas use of domestic bank cards to be monitored

- By Dong Feng

Starting from September 1, all banks are required to submit cross- border transactio­ns made with cards to the State Administra­tion of Foreign Exchange ( SAFE), according to a media report. Experts assure there’s no actions required by consumers.

According to the Beijing Youth Daily on Sunday, the SAFE published a circular on reporting overseas bank card transactio­ns in early June.

Experts said this is part of a wider array of measures to fight money laundering and terrorism financing.

To improve the statistics on and to monitor the propriety of overseas bank card transactio­ns, all domestic card- issuing financial institutio­ns shall report informatio­n on all overseas withdrawal­s and single deals worth more than 1,000 yuan ($ 150) via domestic bank cards.

Statistics show that the total amount of overseas bank card transactio­ns by individual­s surpassed $ 120 billion in 2016, the report said.

Liu Jian, a senior research fellow at the Bank of Communicat­ions, said that consumers have nothing to worry about as this is a backend operation by financial institutio­ns.

“Data collection might provide a solid foundation for new technologi­es such as big data,” Liu noted.

“With the support of big data, analytics results will be more accurate regarding questionab­le transactio­ns.”

Tan Xiaofen, vice director of the Internatio­nal Finance Research Center at the Beijing- based Central University of Finance and Economics, told the Global Times on Sunday that the measure aims to track repeated overseas transactio­ns to verify they represent real deals. The tracking systems might facilitate an ongoing anticorrup­tion drive, Tan said.

In recent years, some enterprise­s have been attempting to issue domestic bank cards under employees’ names for asset transfer, Tan said, adding this regulation will help identify asset transfer intentions.

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