China Daily

Commercial banks get wealth act together

- By JIANG XUEQING jiangxueqi­ng@ chinadaily.com.cn

Commercial banks are accelerati­ng efforts to adjust their wealth management products or WMP business according to new regulatory requiremen­ts, as China is stepping up control over financial risks.

It is expected that China will soon formally launch guidelines to tighten rules on the asset management business of various financial institutio­ns.

Top leaders of the country have approved new regulation­s for the asset management sector to tackle offbalance-sheet lending and eventually address China’s debt problems, bankers said.

Gu Shu, president of Industrial and Commercial Bank of China Ltd, the country’s largest commercial lender by assets, has a positive attitude toward the regulatory tightening.

“To develop the asset management business well … there should be regulation­s and standardiz­ed developmen­t,” Gu said at a recent news conference.

As at the end of 2017, the balance of ICBC’s wealth management products stood at 3 trillion yuan ($477 billion), up 11.4 percent from the previous year. The bank ranked first among its peers in terms of the stock and the increase of WMPs, he said.

“We are designing networth wealth management products, which are in line with regulatory requiremen­ts. We are also doing research on transformi­ng non-standard asset investment into standard asset investment. In terms of risk control, we are simplifyin­g our product system and reducing embedment to increase penetratio­n of WMPs according to new rules,” he said.

So, Gu is confident that ICBC’s asset management business will develop in a sustainabl­e and more standardiz­ed way after the new regulation­s take effect.

Zhao Huan, president of Agricultur­al Bank of China Ltd, said regulatory tightening will motivate commercial banks to operate legally and in compliance with rules and thus contribute to sustainabl­e and healthy developmen­t of banks.

“We will follow new regulation­s on interbank and asset management businesses so that the interbank business will head in the direction of bridging the short-term funding gap, and the asset management business will meet the requiremen­ts of serving the real economy, shifting towards net-worth wealth management products that are similar to open-end funds, and lowering the risk of maturity mismatch,” Zhao said.

Under the overall policy, these two types of business will remain relatively stable, he said.

While streamlini­ng their asset management business, many banks made moves to meet growing client demands for globalized asset management portfolios.

Last year, ICBC set up a company in Hong Kong for internatio­nal asset management. Just a year later, the latter’s assets under management have reached over HK$100 billion ($12.74 billion).

As at the end of 2016, the volume of the asset management business in China reached 116.18 trillion yuan, according to a report published by the China Banking Associatio­n.

Some 497 commercial banks issued 100,107 accumu-

lative WMPs. The outstandin­g balance of WMPs reached 29.05 trillion yuan, or 25 percent of the entire asset management business nationwide, at the end of 2016.

Since last year, the country’s top banking regulator has been issuing a number of directives to reduce financial leverage, address noncomplia­nt practices and improve risk management.

As at the end of January, the balance of interbank WMPs dropped by 3.6 trillion yuan year-on-year. The growth of the wealth management business fell to 1 percent, down by 26.6 percentage points from the previous year.

The war on financial risks will continue this year, with renewed efforts to crack down on shadow banking activities and further rectificat­ion of financial irregulari­ties, said Guo Shuqing, head of the regulator for the banking and insurance industries.

 ?? FAN JIASHAN / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? Visitors check out new financial products at ICBC’s booth at the Beijing Internatio­nal Wealth Managment Expo in 2015.
FAN JIASHAN / FOR CHINA DAILY Visitors check out new financial products at ICBC’s booth at the Beijing Internatio­nal Wealth Managment Expo in 2015.

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