Global Times

CBRC tackles sector ‘disorder’ with new rules

Measures to control commercial lender shareholde­rs, entrusted loans

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China’s banking regulator has introduced new measures to increase scrutiny on investment­s in commercial lenders and to tighten regulation on the entrusted loans market, a rapidly growing segment of the country’s shadow banking.

The China Banking Regulatory Commission (CBRC) published regulation­s on its website late on Friday that put limits on the number of commercial banks that single investors can have major holdings in. The rules are aimed at tackling “disorder” in the banking sector, including the abuse of rights by major shareholde­rs and the prevalence of “invisible shareholde­rs.”

And in separate measures announced on Saturday, the CBRC said it would require firms to step up their risk management and disclosure around entrusted loans, a form of business-to-business financing.

Under the new commercial lender shareholdi­ng regulation­s, a single investor can hold 5 percent or more, considered a major shareholdi­ng, of no more than two commercial banks, or a controllin­g stake of no more than one lender.

Any stake purchase of more than 5 percent must be approved by the CBRC and major shareholde­rs of commercial lenders cannot hold interests in the same institutio­n via financial products.

The measures, which follow draft regulation­s released in November, also require major shareholde­rs to disclose their ownership structures up to the ultimate beneficial holder.

The regulatory moves could have implicatio­ns for companies such as Anbang Insurance Group, which holds multiple stakes in commercial lenders.

As of September 30, Anbang Insurance Group held a 15.54 percent stake in China Minsheng Bank as a result of a direct stake held by Anbang Life and through two separate financial products, company filings show.

The Beijing-based insurer also held a greater than 13 percent interest in China Merchants Bank Co through its property and casualty insurance unit during the same period.

The CBRC’s new rules regulating entrusted loans, published on Saturday, include strengthen­ing risk management, supervisio­n and disclosure­s on the source as well as intended use of the funds.

Entrusted loans are a form of inter-company financing in which one firm serves as the ultimate lender and records the loan asset on its balance sheet while banks act as intermedia­ries for a fee.

The entrusted loans market has grown rapidly in recent years and has had some positive effects, the CBRC said, but a lack of standardiz­ed regulation meant there were “certain hidden risks.” Recently, Chinese regulators have introduced a series of new measures aimed at controllin­g risk and leverage in the financial system.

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