China Daily

Banking supervisio­n to intensify

New regulation­s to tackle credit concealed by multiple layers of products

- By WANG YANFEI wangyanfei@chinadaily.com.cn

The government will continue to tighten supervisio­n on the banking sector with regulation­s that could extend into credit beyond the reach of supervisor­s, the head of a provincial office of China Banking Regulatory Commission said.

“The plan to implement strong supervisio­n is to reduce financial intermedia­ries that have driven up enterprise­s’ borrowing costs and may pose risks to the financial sector,” Lai Xiufu, head of the Hubei Office of China Banking Regulatory Commission, said during the ongoing annual meeting of the 13th National People’s Congress.

“Regulators hope to penetrate the financing chain to quantify the hidden credit that has been concealed by multiple layers of products,” he said. “Such efforts would help improve the quality of bank balance sheets and help guide money to better support the non-financial sector.”

He referred to the commission’s efforts to reduce leverage in the banking sector, including the asset management rules that are expected to come out soon. Rules will specifical­ly target risk created by implicit payments related to innovative financial instrument­s, such as wealth management products, according to a draft guideline published last year.

Such new financing channels helped enterprise­s that faced difficulti­es raise money from capital markets, but part of that money has flowed to some sectors that “should not be supported,” according to Lai.

He said the regulator would strive to quantify credit in the future, after banks have lengthened the asset management chain with new financing channels.

Current strong efforts remain appropriat­e, he said, in response to concerns over whether deleveragi­ng has gone too far and might haunt the overall performanc­e of the banking sector.

“Banks need leverage. The key thing is leverage level cannot be too high and banks should not add inappropri­ate leverage,” he said.

As asset quality improves, banks would have greater capacity to issue more credit to support the non-financial sector, he said. The commission’s recent moves to lower bad-loan coverage ratio reflect the idea of encouragin­g more credit to support the non-financial sector, Lai said.

The commission has issued a guideline lowering the badloan coverage ratio to a minimum 120 percent from the previous 150 percent, and allowing banks to cut the requiremen­t amount of provisions over total loans from 2.5 percent minimum to 1.5 percent, according to Lai.

“With improved balance sheets, we think it is the right time to relax some thresholds and encourage banks to provide better support to the nonfinanci­al sector,” he said.

“On the other hand, there are ample opportunit­ies for local authoritie­s to maneuver to prevent risks,” he said, adding that, “banks with high risks will face high thresholds.”

Liu Kun contribute­d to this story.

 ??  ?? Lai Xiufu, head of Hubei Office of China Banking Regulatory Commission
Lai Xiufu, head of Hubei Office of China Banking Regulatory Commission

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