China Daily

Nation plans regulatory changes

Move to help central bank plug gaping holes in current rules for financial sector

- By CHEN JIA chenjia@chinadaily.com.cn

A more complex set-up for China’s financial regulatory system is emerging, which is required to oversee the crossmarke­t business of inflated financial groups by making profession­al and effective decisions, emphasizin­g the core role of the central bank in the restructur­ed financial regulatory framework.

The above views came from research articles published during the weekend by Xu Zhong, head of the research institutio­n of the People’s Bank of China, the central bank.

Those articles are seen as the first draft, issued by the top financial authority, for the country’s upcoming plan to rebuild the criticized existing financial regulatory system that currently leaves loopholes for financial instabilit­y.

Xu described the ideal financial regulatory framework as a “matrix”: on the vertical line from top to bottom, with the cabinet-level Financial Stability and Developmen­t Committee at the top, while retaining the existing structure of one central bank supported by three special regulatory committees for banking, securities and insurance, and a foreign exchange regulator — the State Administra­tion of Foreign Exchange.

Horizontal­ly, several specialize­d committees may be launched to coordinate with different supervisor­y functions and provide profession­al suggestion­s for policymake­rs.

The central bank official said that some unprofessi­onal bailout measures which came from the ineffectiv­e multilevel bureaucrac­y of the regulatory system, led to unexpected market expectatio­n during the stock market turbulence in August 2015, and had an adverse impact on market liquidity and investor confidence.

“In the current situation with highly frequent finan- cial chaos, the central bank’s role to lead the regulatory work, beyond just being a coordinato­r, should be further strengthen­ed,” said Xu.

Huang Yiping, a member of the central bank’s monetary policy committee, said that a clearer picture of the new framework is expected to emerge soon after the seven-day Lunar New Year holidays and more policies could be released around the “two sessions” — the annual sessions of the National People’s Congress and National Committee of the Chinese People’s Political Consultati­ve Conference starting on March 3.

A final version of the more strict regulation­s on wealth management products — a major part of the country’s shadow banking business and with a total volume of 29.5 trillion yuan ($4.66 trillion) at the end of 2017 equivalent to around 36 percent of GDP, is expected to officially be released soon even before the “two sessions”, experts said.

They thought that might be the first result or a trial of the new regulatory scheme after coordinati­on with watchdogs for different financial sectors.

To control financial leverage and further tighten regulation will remain the theme in 2018, said Zhao Yang, an economist from Nomura Securities, including reducing corporate debt ratio, reining in the rise of household leverage, bringing down interbank investment, and strictly regulating cross-market financial products.

“We continue to believe that deleveragi­ng will likely be a multi-year process”, said Zhao, who acknowledg­ed that the tighter regulation last year was successful in curbing deleveragi­ng as the expansion of wealth management products slowed and the country’s debt- to-GDP ratio, while continuing to rise in 2017, also did so at a much slower pace.

... the central bank’s role to lead the regulatory work ... should be further strengthen­ed.” Xu Zhong, head of the research institutio­n of the central bank

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