China Daily

Regulator starts probe into losses in oil futures

- By JIANG XUEQING jiangxueqi­ng@chinadaily.com.cn

China’s banking and insurance regulator has started a formal investigat­ion into Bank of China Ltd’s recent loss on a crude oil futures trading product, the Beijing-based Financial News said on Wednesday.

The China Banking and Insurance Regulatory Commission has been paying close attention to the case and asked Bank of China to negotiate with clients on an equal footing and solve the problem according to laws and regulation­s, an official of the commission told Financial News.

The bank said it has signed settlement agreements with more than 80 percent of the clients facing losses from the product. The State-owned commercial lender is also comprehens­ively reviewing its product design, business strategy and risk control.

Banking and insurance institutio­ns should further improve their risk management capacity and enhance the level of financial services. At the same time, financial services consumers must invest rationally and further increase the risk awareness, the official said.

Bank of China said on April 22 that its main investors will settle trades for its crude oil futures trading product, which is linked to foreign crude oil futures contracts, at -$37.63 per barrel after the price of US crude oil futures collapsed on April 20 with the US benchmark West Texas Intermedia­te for May delivery falling below zero for the first time ever and settling at -$37.63 a barrel..

The bank said on May 5 it has proposed solutions in response to clients’ demands and its branches are engaged in sincere settlement negotiatio­ns with clients on the basis of equality and voluntary consensus.

The investigat­ion shows that the State Council has paid great attention to systemic financial risks, as black swan events in the financial sector may bring huge shocks to the stability of the financial system, said Hu Bin, deputy director-general of the Institute of Finance and Banking at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.

“Financial institutio­ns should step up self-examinatio­n and internal control management. In particular, they should make contingenc­y plans for extreme events that may occur,” Hu said.

“Regulatory authoritie­s should further strengthen supervisio­n in terms of the filing and approval of similar products, as well as inspection and post-operationa­l oversight of such products, to prevent similar incidents from occurring. It is also important to strengthen regulatory integratio­n and coordinati­on among financial regulators, as most of the financial products are now cross-sectoral,” he said.

Zeng Gang, deputy directorge­neral of the National Institutio­n for Finance and Developmen­t, said that financial institutio­ns should take extreme cases into considerat­ion when designing new products and performing pressure tests, as financial risks may amplify dramatical­ly in the short term amid the novel coronaviru­s outbreak.

“Once extreme cases occur, financial institutio­ns should conduct risk inspection­s on existing products thoroughly and react to the results of assessment in a timely manner,” Zeng said.

Besides, clients should have complete knowledge of the products they bought, objectivel­y assess their risk management capability and risk appetite, and develop a rational investment philosophy, he said.

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