Khaleej Times

China’s top seCurities regulator steps down

Turmoil in stock markets has battered faith in Beijing’s economic management

- Didi Tang — AP

China’s top securities regulator will step down following months of turmoil in Chinese stock markets that have battered faith in Beijing’s economic management.

The departure of Xiao Gang, a legal expert with decades of experience in the finance industry, may help assuage public anger at the dramatic boom and bust, but doesn’t address the market’s underlying problems.

The official Xinhua News Agency reported Saturday that Xiao would be replaced by Liu Shiyu, chairman of the Agricultur­al Bank of China and a former deputy governor of China’s central bank.

“Xiao Gang is worth no pity but he is destined to be a tragic figure, caught between pro-government and pro-market factions and left to take care of a mess from an unhealthy system,” Beijing-based veteran financial commentato­r Shi Shusi said. “His departure will not bring a clean era for China’s capital, but at most a belated consolatio­n for investors who have been hurt.”

The capital market is where China’s rivaling political forces have come into most intense clashes, Shi said. The unusual interventi­on by the Ministry of Public Security and investigat­ions against securities firms following market meltdowns are proof that covert political forces within the Chinese government had made waves, Shi said.

“As China transforms, the capital market is where political forces

His departure will not bring a clean era for China’s capital, but at most a belated consolatio­n for investors who have been hurt

Shi Shusi, Financial commentato­r

wrestle with each other and is where the conflicts play out,” he said.

Fuelled by cheerleadi­ng in the state press after officials said Chinese stocks should rise, the Shanghai and Shenzhen markets vaulted from late 2014, reaching a peak in June last year, then crumbled in several waves of panic selling that sent shockwaves around the world.

Officials prolonged the turmoil with draconian measures such as banning major shareholde­rs in publicly traded companies from selling any shares and ordering state funds to buy. The bust hurt millions of neophyte Chinese investors who piled into the market when it was near its peak.

Analysts say Beijing’s moves on stocks, as well as its halting steps to ease currency controls, show the tension between the ruling Communist Party’s desire for marketorie­nted reform and its overriding objective of retaining absolute political control.

The Shanghai Composite Index closed at 2,860.02 on Friday, a decline of about 45 percent from its peak in June of about 5,178 and barely higher than late 2014, when the market started rising.

Liu, the new chief securities regulator, was trained in engineerin­g at the prestigiou­s Tsinghua University and started a career in the state banking industry in the late 1980s.

Xiao, who was appointed in March 2013, was particular­ly criticised for the mishandled introducti­on of a “circuit breaker” mechanism for the markets in January that halted trading when prices fall by a certain percentage.

It was meant to help stabilise Chinese stocks as authoritie­s gradually withdrew their emergency support measures, but only added to the turmoil.

 ?? AP file ?? Xiao Gang and Zhou Xiaochuan, governor of the People’s Bank of China, at a Press conference in Beijing. —
AP file Xiao Gang and Zhou Xiaochuan, governor of the People’s Bank of China, at a Press conference in Beijing. —

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