China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Futures law to make capital market more open

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

With China’s top legislatur­e adopting a new law on futures and derivative­s trading on Wednesday, a more regulated and open capital market will take shape in China and it will be conducive to the sustained developmen­t of the real economy, experts said on Thursday.

The new law, which will take effect on Aug 1, is the first of its kind in the country since futures and derivative­s trading commenced three decades ago. It was approved at a session of the Standing Committee of the National People’s Congress.

Basic rules to govern futures trading, settlement and delivery are in the new law, said Wang Xiang, deputy head of the Office for Economic Law of the NPC’s Legislativ­e Affairs Committee.

The new law has also clarified the rules concerning the launch of new products, futures firms’ business scope, and margin payment. The futures and derivative markets will thus give full play to their function of price discovery, risk management and resources allocation, which should spur the real economy, he said.

Different from the administra­tive or department regulation­s implemente­d in the past, the new law clarifies for the first time the basic rules for futures and derivative trading from the legal perspectiv­e. It has provided a legal framework and systematic arrangemen­t for the healthy developmen­t of the futures and derivative markets, said Yu Hongzheng, partner of JunZeJun Law Offices.

Yang Delong, managing director of First Seafront Fund, said a growing number of mutual fund firms have received approval for futures and derivative­s trading to meet growing investment demand. The new law will thus pave the way for the introducti­on of more mutual fund products focused on futures and derivative­s trading.

The inclusion of derivative trading is a highlight of the futures and derivative­s law, said Li Yating, vicegenera­l manager of COFCO Futures. Rules related to derivative­s such as forward contracts and swaps have all been included in the law, which will better guide the developmen­t of the derivative­s market, she said.

By referring to widely adopted internatio­nal practices in futures and derivative trading, the new law aims at creating a more efficient, equal, transparen­t and systembase­d environmen­t, said Hou Xinqiang, general manager of Jinrui Futures.

More mature overseas investors and institutio­ns will be attracted to the Chinese market while more domestic futures companies will be able to tap into overseas markets under the new law, he said.

Wang Huadong, chairman of Hongyuan Futures, said the new law specifies the requiremen­ts for cross-border supervisio­n. This has laid the groundwork for two-way opening-up in the Chinese futures market. Futures companies can better use the onshore and offshore markets from now on, which will help bolster China’s dual-circulatio­n strategy, he said.

According to the China Futures Associatio­n, the trading volume topped a record 7.5 billion lots last year. Total trading value also hit a historic high of 581.2 trillion yuan ($90.8 trillion) in 2021. China has been the world’s largest futures market for agricultur­al, nonferrous metals, coke and steam coal products, the associatio­n said.

 ?? WANG GANG / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? Pedestrian­s walk past the Shanghai Futures Exchange.
WANG GANG / FOR CHINA DAILY Pedestrian­s walk past the Shanghai Futures Exchange.

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