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Chinese finance regulators vow tighter supervisio­n

CENTRAL BANK PLANS TO FIX LOOPHOLES IN FINANCIAL TECHNOLOGY RULES

- BEIJING

Chinese officials pledged to tighten supervisio­n in the financial services industry, suggesting a recent regulatory onslaught on the private sector that sent shock waves globally is not over yet.

The central bank will close loopholes in its financial technology regulation, and include all types of financial institutio­ns, services and products into its prudential supervisio­n framework, Chen Yulu, deputy governor of the People’s Bank of China, said at the China Internatio­nal Finance Annual Forum in Beijing yesterday. Authoritie­s will also boost foreign exchange market supervisio­n at macro and micro levels, he said without elaboratin­g.

“We will enhance the effectiven­ess and profession­alism of financial regulation, build all kinds of firewalls to resolutely prevent systemic risks,” Chen said.

Significan­t losses

The China Securities Regulatory Commission will improve its regulation­s for companies seeking overseas listings, and enhance channels for foreign investors to participat­e in China’s onshore securities futures market, Vice-Chairman Fang Xinghai said at the same forum.

Investors have endured significan­t losses this year with the nation’s benchmark CSI 300 Index down about 16 per cent from its February high, making it among the worst-performing major gauges in Asia this year.

China is moving to plug a gap that’s for decades allowed technology giants like Alibaba Group Holding Ltd and Tencent Holdings Ltd to sidestep restrictio­ns on foreign investment. In July, regulators proposed rules that would require nearly all companies seeking to list in foreign countries to undergo a cybersecur­ity review.

The securities regulator has communicat­ed with foreign investors on the recent plunge in overseas-listed Chinese stocks, triggered by a spate of surprise crackdowns on industries from private tutoring to internet platforms, Fang said. The investors believed they have under-allocated Chinese assets, he said.

Extreme easing policies by central banks in major developed economies over the pandemic have led to increasing financial fragility globally, said Zhou Liang, vice-chairman of the China Banking and Insurance Regulatory Commission, who was speaking on the same panel. The banking regulator will focus on preventing risks from foreign institutio­ns’ “malicious” cross-border capital movement, he said.

We will enhance the effectiven­ess and profession­alism of financial regulation, build all kinds of firewalls to resolutely prevent systemic risks.”

Chen Yulu | Deputy Governor, People’s Bank of China

 ?? Reuters ?? ■
Beijing headquarte­rs of the People’s Bank of China.
Reuters ■ Beijing headquarte­rs of the People’s Bank of China.

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