Business Standard

China’s central bank to play bigger role in managing risk

- STELLA QIU & ADAM JOURDAN 16 july

China's central bank will take on a bigger role in macro-prudential management and in averting systemic risk in the financial system, President Xi Jinping said at a once-in-fiveyears government work conference that ended on Saturday.

Financial security is a vital part of national security, Xi said at the fifth National Financial Work Conference, adding that China will strengthen the Communist Party's leadership in the financial sector.

A Financial Stability and Developmen­t Committee will also be set up under the State Council, or cabinet, state media cited Xi as saying.

No details were given on the committee and on how the role of the People's Bank of China (PBOC) will be strengthen­ed.

Regulators oversee different parts of China's complex financial sector, and no singular regulator has a complete picture of capital movements in the system.

That complicate­s the job of authoritie­s to catch market manipulato­rs who secretly divert funds to risky financial products as they chase higher returns.

Authoritie­s also worry about "giant crocodiles", a term regulators have started using to describe law-breaking tycoons who circumvent regulation­s to grab control of other companies.

Earlier this year, the China Insurance Regulatory Commission (CIRC) banned the chairman of Foresea Life from the insurance business for 10 years, citing violations of rules in the firm's use of insurance funds.

CIRC separately also restricted Evergrande Life's stock trading activities for one year, after accusing the insurance firm of engaging in irregular investment activities.

Xi also said China will push forward with deleveragi­ng in its economy, and that lowering debt ratios among state-owned enterprise­s is the most pressing issue.

Beijing will also strictly control new local government debt and strengthen oversight of internet financing, he said.

Finance is the "blood and pulse" of the economy, and it is the sector's "divine vocation" to serve the real economy, the official Xinhua News Agency quoted Xi as saying.

Xi called for greater accountabi­lity for financial regulators at the meeting, saying it would be "negligence of duty" if regulators fail to identify risks in time, and it would be "malfeasanc­e" if they fail to report and contain the identified risks.

The main financial regulators include the China Banking Regulatory Commission, the China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC) and CIRC.

In 2015, a poorly coordinate­d response to a stock market crash in China spurred scrutiny on the government's response.

Premier Li Keqiang openly criticised financial regulators as not responding sufficient­ly.

Xi said on Saturday that regulators must share industry data within their jurisdicti­ons and coordinate their financial regulation­s.

The financial work conference comes ahead of a once-in-fiveyear congress of the Communist Party in the autumn, where Xi is expected to further consolidat­e his hold on power.

"Traditiona­lly the (financial) conference is presided by the premier, but this time, not only was the big boss (Xi) there, people from the anti-corruption watchdog and the parliament advisory body were there too," said a person who follows Chinese regulatory developmen­ts.

At the conference, Premier Li said China will maintain prudent monetary policy and an appropriat­e credit growth rate while keeping liquidity basically stable.

"China's plans to ameliorate systemic risk, while laudable, are also significan­tly driven by the desire for an unblemishe­d 19th Party Congress," said Brock Silvers, managing director of Kaiyuan Capital, a Shanghaiba­sed investment advisory firm.

"Regulators have yet to announce detailed steps, and probably won't do so prior to the Congress," he said. "In the interim I don't expect major changes, such as the creation of a unified superregul­ator."

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