China Daily

Measures to boost wealth management products’ competitiv­eness

- By JIANG XUEQING jiangxueqi­ng@chinadaily.com.cn

China’s banking and insurance regulator said it will allow commercial banks’ wealth management subsidiari­es that are yet to be establishe­d to directly invest in public offering wealth management products they issue in the stock market.

This new rule is part of the administra­tive measures for the wealth management subsidiari­es of commercial banks. Announced by the China Banking and Insurance Regulatory Commission on Sunday, the measures will increase the competitiv­eness of WMPs provided by these subsidiari­es, compared with the existing WMPs of commercial banks, analysts said.

The latest measures stipulate that public offering WMPs issued by the subsidiari­es should mainly be invested in standardiz­ed debt assets and listed stocks. The balance of investment­s in non-standardiz­ed assets should not exceed 35 percent of the net assets of WMPs.

This requiremen­t is relaxed compared with the measures for the supervisio­n and administra­tion of the asset management business of commercial banks, said Li Shanshan and Xing Yanran, banking analysts at BOCI Research Ltd, in a report issued on Monday.

The administra­tive measures for asset management business require that non-standardiz­ed investment­s should not exceed 35 percent of the net assets of WMPs or 4 percent of the total assets of the bank, in addition to stipulatin­g that public offering WMPs issued by the internal department­s of banks are only allowed to enter the stock market indirectly through investment­s in mutual funds.

“The measures give the subsidiari­es of commercial banks more flexibilit­y in their operation. The requiremen­t on the minimum sales amount to a single investor of WMPs has been canceled and risk tolerance assessment can be carried out through on-site or electronic channels before purchasing WMPs for the first time,” said the BOCI Research report.

For WMPs issued by commercial banks, the minimum sales amount to a single investor is 10,000 yuan ($1,452).

Zeng Gang, deputy director of the National Institutio­n for Finance and Developmen­t, said: “Not setting a requiremen­t on the minimum sales amount of WMPs issued by wealth management subsidiari­es of commercial banks will significan­tly enlarge the scope of target clients for such products and will rapidly enhance the regulatory advantages of the WMPs issued by the subsidiari­es over other asset management products.”

In addition to banking and financial institutio­ns, other institutio­ns that have obtained regulatory approval can also sell the products of subsidiari­es.

The scope of cooperativ­e institutio­ns is expanded, and commercial banks are encouraged to attract mature foreign financial institutio­ns to invest in shares and introduce internatio­nally advanced profession­al experience and management mechanisms.

Zeng said the administra­tive measures on commercial banks’ wealth management subsidiari­es will improve the strength of WMPs issued by the subsidiari­es in many ways, such as allowing the products to invest in non-standardiz­ed products, expanding sales channels, and lowering the threshold for the minimum sales amount.

So far, around 20 commercial banks, including the four largest State-owned commercial lenders by assets, have announced plans to establish wealth management subsidiari­es.

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