Khaleej Times

‘Don’t blame Boj’ for its peers’ woes

- Taiga Uranaka and Takahiko Wada

tokyo — Japan’s top financial regulator said regional banks “should not blame the Bank of Japan” for their woes, urging them to explore ways to survive ultralow interest rates.

“They should not just sit and wait for the Boj to change its policy. Will everything be alright if it seeks exit and normalises interest rates? I don’t think so,” Toshihide Endo, commission­er of the Financial Services Agency (FSA), said on Wednesday.

The comments come as many of Japan’s roughly 100 regional banks grapple with diminishin­g returns from their traditiona­l lending business, hit by a low interest rate environmen­t amid the Boj’s ultra-loose monetary policy.

Regional banks’ combined core profits totalled ¥1.2 trillion ($10.9 billion) in the year ended in March, data complied by the FSA shows, down 30 per cent from five years earlier, just before the central bank launched aggressive monetary easing.

Endo, who became FSA chief in

They [regional banks] should not just sit and wait for the Boj to change its policy Toshihide Endo, commission­er of the Financial Services Agency

July, said management­s at some regional banks needed to get their act together, warning that they were “not considerin­g seriously” how to build a sustainabl­e business model despite the industry’s gloomy prospects.

“We have been telling them to consider action and make judgements on their own, not just because we tell them to do so,” he said.

Endo said the FSA is not urging consolidat­ion among regional banks, emphasisin­g it is up to the management of each lender to decide on options to survive.

At the same time, Endo said there have been some mergers that made him doubt management­s’ seriousnes­s. “Some rival banks got together under a holding company just for the sake of a non-aggression pact. I don’t see the point of it,” he said.

Endo, 59, joined the finance ministry in 1982. From 2015 until last month, he oversaw the country’s financial firms at the FSA’s supervisor­y bureau. Before that, he ran its inspection bureau. On cryptocurr­ency exchanges, he said the FSA was trying to strike a balance between protecting consumers and promoting technologi­cal innovation.

Japan last year became the first country to regulate cryptocurr­ency exchanges, as it tries to encourage technologi­cal innovation while ensuring consumer protection.

The FSA took a tougher stance towards the industry after the $530 million theft of digital money from Tokyo-based Coin check in January.

FSA inspection­s found sloppy management at many of the exchanges, saying they lacked basic internal controls to protect users and prevent money laundering. As a result, some exchanges were ordered to temporaril­y suspend operations.

 ?? — Reuters ?? The Bank of Japan’s ultra-loose monetary policy has rubbed roughly 100 regional banks the wrong way.
— Reuters The Bank of Japan’s ultra-loose monetary policy has rubbed roughly 100 regional banks the wrong way.

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