Business Day

China softens stance on private capital investment

-

CHINA will give private capital the same entry standards to the banking industry as other capital, state media said yesterday, as the government makes its hardest push in a decade to court investors by welcoming them into a handful of sectors.

Private companies would be allowed to buy into banks through private stock placements, new share subscripti­ons, equity transfers, and mergers and acquisitio­ns, the official China Daily said, citing the China Banking Regulatory Commission. Private investment would also be permitted in trust, financial leasing and auto-financing companies, the report said.

“The banking regulatory branches at different levels cannot set up separate restrictio­ns or additional conditions for private capital to enter China’s banking sector. They are obliged to improve transparen­cy of the banking market access constantly,” the newspaper cited the regulator as saying.

In order to encourage lending to the private sector, China should let private capital play a bigger role in financial institutio­ns, and encourage private lending companies to become commercial banks, Wu Xiaoling, a former deputy central bank governor, told the China Daily. “The government has encouraged small lending companies to turn into rural banks,” she said. “But with a minimum shareholdi­ng requiremen­t of the main initiator, private investors lack enthusiasm for such things.”

Separately, the China Securities Regulatory Commission said it would support private companies to list on the stock market, both domestical­ly and overseas, and to issue bonds. On Friday, the powerful watchdog of China’s state-owned firms said China would allow private investment in state companies when they restructur­e or sell shares, but gave few details on how that would happen.

However, analysts are sceptical China will follow through on its pledges to cut the role of the state, given that its strangleho­ld over swathes of the world’s second-largest economy has been unchalleng­ed for years.

Analysts have said deep vested interests often backed by politician­s are the biggest obstacle dogging privatisat­ion efforts. That said, government ministries may follow the state-owned Asset Supervisio­n and Administra­tion Commission’s lead and voice support for privatisat­ion in coming weeks. Reuters

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa