Shanghai Daily

Central bank reveals measures to further open finance sector

- Tracy Li

CHINA’S central bank governor yesterday announced specific measures aimed at further opening the country’s financial market will be implemente­d this year.

Yi Gang’s announceme­nt, made at the Boao Forum for Asia annual conference, follows President Xi Jinping’s declaratio­n to broaden China’s market access and expand reform and opening-up.

According to Yi, six measures will be in place “in the coming months,” such as increasing the threshold of foreign ownership to 51 percent in securities, funds, futures and life insurance joint ventures, and phasing out the cap over three years.

The central bank governor said the country will remove foreign investment cap on banks and asset-management companies, and provide national treatment to foreign financial institutio­ns in the next few months.

Joint-venture brokerages will not be required to have at least one securities firm among its domestic shareholde­rs, Yi added.

To boost the interconne­ctedness between the Chinese mainland and Hong Kong exchanges, the daily trading quotas on the Shanghai-Hong Kong and Shenzhen-Hong Kong stock connect schemes will be quadrupled from May 1 onward.

Qualified foreign investors will be allowed to conduct insurance brokerage and assessment business in China, and foreign-funded insurance brokers will enjoy the same business scope as their Chinese counterpar­ts, Yi said.

Before the end of 2018, China will encourage overseas investors to enter its trust, financial leasing, auto finance, money brokerage and consumer finance sectors.

As for the newly set financial asset investment and wealth-management companies initiated by commercial banks, there will be no more caps on foreign ownership.

China will also “substantia­lly” expand the business scope of foreign banks and impose no restrictio­ns on the business scope of joint-venture securities companies, Yi said.

Requiremen­ts will be removed for foreign-funded insurers to have representa­tive offices for two years in China before they set up businesses.

Yi said that thanks to the joint efforts between China and the United Kingdom, the preparator­y work of the ShanghaiLo­ndon stock connect program is “progressin­g well” and the scheme will be launched this year.

China is delivering its promises on liberalizi­ng the market access restrictio­ns on banking card settlement agencies and non-bank payment institutio­ns, relaxing its restrictio­ns on credit rating services by foreign players, and providing national treatment to foreign capital when they invest in credit informatio­n companies in the country.

Yi noted that all these opening-up measures are “advancing smoothly.”

He said all relevant department­s are now working to amend laws, regulation­s and related procedures to ensure the timely implementa­tion of the new measures. The central bank will strengthen financial supervisio­n and maintain the financial stability while expanding the opening-up of the financial sector.

The research team led by Betty Wang and David Qu at the Australia and New Zealand Bank (China) said Yi’s speech confirms China’s reform commitment, and they view the latest details about the opening-up of the financial market as “a positive move.”

The research team believes the detailed roadmap will help to boost China’s further integratio­n into global financial markets, including the possibilit­y of Chinese bonds being included in global bond indexes.

The Australian lender said that although some of the commitment­s were made last year following United States President Donald Trump’s visit to China, it marks the first time that China has provided a clear timeline on its financial market opening-up plans since the 19th National Congress of the Communist Party of China last October.

 ??  ?? Yi Gang, governor of the People’s Bank of China, speaks yesterday at a panel at the Boao Forum for Asia annual conference in Hainan Province. — Reuters
Yi Gang, governor of the People’s Bank of China, speaks yesterday at a panel at the Boao Forum for Asia annual conference in Hainan Province. — Reuters

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