China Daily

CBRC mulls guidelines to prevent financial risks

- By LI XIANG and ZHENG YIRAN Contact the writers at lixiang@chinadaily.com.cn

China’s banking regulator vowed on Friday to clean up irregulari­ties in the sector and intensify the crackdown on financial speculatio­n that exploits systemic loopholes.

Yang Jiacai, assistant chairman of the China Banking Regulatory Commission, said the regulator will soon issue guidelines on preventing financial risks.

The comprehens­ive regulation will include all innovation-driven businesses.

Industry observers said the CBRC’s statement underscore­s the government’s determinat­ion to contain both systemic financial risks and the rising trend of “exit the real, enter the fake” — the practice of companies abandoning real economic activity and seeking financial speculatio­n instead.

Yang urged banks to increase transparen­cy of their business. The CBRC, he said, will scrutinize complex financial products and transactio­ns involving too many participan­ts.

“The new guidelines will offer specific requiremen­ts in 10 major areas and provide concrete action plans to address major risks,” Yang said at a news conference.

Yang further said the regulator will crack the whip on financial institutio­ns indulging in irregular arbitrage, illegal transactio­ns, wrongful profit-making and improper fees or charges.

Xu Jieqin, deputy director of the Policy Research Bureau of the CBRC, said serving the real economy and supporting the supply-side structural reform will be a top priority for the banking industry this year.

The C BR C urged commercial banks to accelerate disposal of their bad assets and adopt a credit policy that would support healthy and stable developmen­t of the property market.

The Chinese central bank and the regulators of the banking, insurance and securities industries have been jointly drafting a comprehens­ive regulatory framework to tighten supervisio­n of the asset and wealth management businesses of the country’ s financial institutio­ns.

The opaque segments, with many investment products amid a regulatory void, have been seen as key sources of risk to the banking system.

The CBRC on Friday also called on banks to improve their internal governance. It said it will allow more private capital in the sector to improve the shareholdi­ng pattern in financial institutio­ns.

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