Guo Shuqing, chairman of the China Securities Regulatory Commission. [File photo] |
China's securities regulator plans to launch a string of measures to boost the capital market, including opening securities industry further to foreign investors, chairman of the China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC) said.
China should keep a watchful eye on systemic risk in the banking sector and needs to substantially boost the scale of direct financing, such as stocks, to diversify the risk, Guo Shuqing, chairman of the China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC), said.
The regulator plans to launch several new products, including high-yield corporate, municipal and government agency bonds, in order to boost direct financing. The regulator will also reduce administrative procedures regarding the issuing of bonds, he added.
Three of the world's top 10 banks, judged by assets, are Chinese. However, cash-strapped small businesses are still experiencing difficulty in raising capital.
"Some of the firms may be more suitable for stock or bond financing but they can't get sufficient financial support because direct financing remains small-scale," he said. "This structural problem can damage the economy seriously."
Guo made the remarks at the regulator's annual work conference which concluded on Monday.
The total assets of China's securities industry stood at 4.7 trillion yuan ($744 billion) by the end of 2011, according to the regulator. This accounts for only 3.9 percent of the total assets of the country's financial industry. The banking sector accounts for more than 90 percent.
Analysts said a vibrant bond market could help diversify risks and reduce over-reliance on the fast-expanding banking sector. But a healthy credit rating system and a mature credit culture are vital to expanding the bond market, they said.
"The development of the bond market is a key part in reducing over-reliance on the banking system," Ivan Chung, a senior analyst at Moody's Investor Service, said.
The regulator is also working to further open the securities market to foreign investors by raising the investment quota for Qualified Foreign Institutional Investors (QFII) in the A-share market, Guo said.
Analysts expect that the regulator may boost the current quota by as much as $50 billion and another 50 billion yuan for QFII investors using overseas yuan deposits.
Guo also noted that China needs to accelerate the development and opening of domestic market intermediaries and introduce advanced technology and personnel from developed markets.
It was reported that the regulator has approved US bank Citigroup Inc to set up a joint-venture securities firm in China.
Analysts said that the acceleration in approving the launch of joint-venture securities firms is part of the regulator's preparation for the long-awaited international board in Shanghai. The board will allow overseas companies to raise capital in the A-share market.
"The board failed to debut in 2011 due to global turbulence," Banny Lam, economist with CCB International Securities Ltd, said. "I believe the board will be launched in the second half of this year when the global economy should improve."
At the annual conference, Guo also called for a greater role for long-term institutional investors such as pension and public housing funds in investing in the country's stock market which fell more than 20 percent in 2011.
Institutional investors in the Chinese stock market only hold 15.6 percent of stocks, according to the regulator. The ratio is much lower than that for developed countries.
Lam said that facilitating long-term funds into the securities market will generate returns and stabilize the market as they are less prone to wild fluctuations.
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