Global Times

Finance focusing on quality

Sector’s improvemen­ts outweigh risks: experts

- By Xie Jun

China’s financial sector is becoming more competent and efficient as well as being more flexible, experts told the Global Times on Wednesday.

“In the past five years, China’s financial sector has improved significan­tly. New problems have also emerged, but are not that important compared with the improvemen­ts,” Cheng Shi, head of ICBC Internatio­nal Research, told the Global Times on Wednesday.

Focus on quality of growth

Liu Xuezhi, a senior analyst at Bank of Communicat­ions, said that five years ago, the priority in China’s financial sector was growth, but nowadays, the sector is more focused on the quality of domestic finance.

Regarding traditiona­l banking, Guo Shuqing, chairman of the China Banking Regulatory Commission, said on October 19 that the banking sector has assets of about 240 trillion yuan ($36 trillion) currently, up more than 83 percent compared with the end of 2012, domestic news website caixin.com reported the same day.

He also noted that the banking sector is continuing to open up. Chinese banks have now set up nearly 1,400 Chinese-funded financial institutio­ns in 64 countries and regions.

“China’s strong economic growth in scale and structure has created largescale and diversifie­d financial demand, which has stimulated the banking sector,” Cheng said.

According to Liu, the improvemen­t is not just restricted to the banking sector. “Positive changes are also taking place in other financial areas like trusts and the yuan,” he told the Global Times on Wednesday.

Both Liu and Cheng noted that the active government reforms are a driving force behind these changes.

Cheng said the most influentia­l financial reform in the past five years was the reform of the yuan’s central parity exchange rate mechanism, which cut the “invisible tie” between the yuan and the US dollar.

“It was based on the foundation of this reform that the yuan was successful­ly included into the IMF’s Special Drawing Rights (SDR) currency basket in October 2016,” Cheng said.

Emerging new finance

Apart from traditiona­l financial sectors, new forms of finance, especially online finance, have also developed quickly in China in recent years.

For example, one popular online finance product, Alibaba Group’s payment tool Alipay, now serves over 520 million users and supports settlement in 19 currencies, Alibaba said in a statement sent to the Global Times.

The rise of online payment tools has also led to surging consumptio­n. According to a report from the Xinhua News Agency in March, mobile payment amounted to 157 trillion yuan in 2016, up nearly 50 percent year-onyear.

“The emergence of new finance has injected vitality into the country’s financial sector, and has created new ideas about how finance can serve the real economy,” Cheng noted.

Higher management requiremen­ts

The developmen­t of the financial sector has also brought many risks, which means that the regulators must enhance their management standard, Liu said. “They must prevent systemic risks, but should also encourage financial innovation.”

Zhou Xiaochuan, governor of the People’s Bank of China, the country’s central bank, said on October 16 that shadow banking and Internet finance will be two of the areas that will be highlighte­d in financial management work to safeguard the country’s financial stability and developmen­t in the future, according to a statement from the central bank.

According to Liu, the risks from shadow banks – non-bank financial intermedia­ries that provide similar services – have decreased a lot as the government took measures to rein in banks’ off-balance sheet businesses.

“There are two difficulti­es in managing shadow banking risks: how to position the risks and how to coordinate management. This requires further innovation and further improvemen­t of management tools,” Cheng explained.

“In the past five years, China’s financial sector has improved significan­tly. New problems have also emerged, but are not that important compared with the improvemen­ts.” Cheng Shi, Head of ICBC Internatio­nal Research

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File Photo: IC

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