China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Draft of futures law signals market developmen­t

- By SHI JING in Shanghai shijing@chinadaily.com.cn

China’s first futures law, a draft of which was submitted to the country’s top legislator on Monday for initial revision, is expected to regulate and further promote the developmen­t of the futures market in the country, experts said.

The Standing Committee of the 13th National People’s Congress, China’s top legislatur­e, began its 28th session on Monday. During the four-day session, the purposes, principles and supervisio­n mechanism of the futures law will be reviewed. The legislatur­e will also review stipulatio­ns for trading, settlement­s and transactio­ns, basic mechanism for other derivative­s trading, protection for futures investors, futures management institutio­ns and trading venues.

The top legislatur­e said the futures law will help the sector better serve the real economy and safeguard the country’s financial security. It will also address the need for better linking of the domestic and internatio­nal circulatio­ns with the help of the futures market. This is the right time for the futures law to take effect, said experts.

According to data released by the China Futures Associatio­n in early February, the total trading value of futures in the Chinese market hit a record of 437.53 trillion yuan ($67.32 trillion) last year, up 50.56 percent on a yearly basis. China accounted for 13.2 percent of the total futures trading value in the world last year.

Last year, China surpassed all other economies in terms of commoditie­s futures trading value for the 11th year in a row. Meanwhile, 12 new futures products were launched last year, including four commoditie­s futures and eight commoditie­s options, according to the associatio­n.

While attending the 16th China (Shenzhen) Internatio­nal Derivative­s Forum in late December, the China Securities Regulatory Commission Vice-Chairman Fang Xinghai said that the futures law will facilitate the reform and opening-up of the Chinese futures market top down. It will define the legal status of market participan­ts, basic legal relationsh­ips and liability, supervisio­n on over-the-counter market, market entry rules and cross-border supervisio­n.

Scott O’Malia, CEO of the Internatio­nal Swaps and Derivative­s Associatio­n Inc, said at the same forum late last year that a normally operating derivative­s market should be secured by a predictabl­e and powerful legal framework, which includes executable close-out netting rules. A prosperous Chinese derivative market will be highly dependent on the close-out netting rules and the legal certainty regarding execution, he said.

Close-out netting is a technique used to determine the net obligation­s of a defaulted counterpar­ty to a derivative­s transactio­n.

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