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在线翻译:
szdaily -> Markets -> 
Top regulator exits crisis mode with cautious market reforms
    2017-03-06  08:53    Shenzhen Daily

    ONE year into his job as China’s top securities regulator, Liu Shiyu is shifting focus from fighting market crises to pushing through cautious reforms.

    After arriving at the China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC) in the wake of a stock market meltdown last February, Liu spent much of his early tenure trying to revive investor confidence. Now, with the Shanghai Composite Index back in a bull market, he’s rolling out a steady stream of initiatives that were put on hold during the crash.

    Liu and his team fleshed out their latest plans in a press briefing in Beijing on Feb. 26, including a proposal for China’s first onshore oil futures and a pledge to reduce the nation’s backlog of initial public offerings (IPOs). “We will not waver from reforms [to make China’s capital markets] more market-based, law-based and international,” said Liu during the press briefing.

    Over the past three months, the CSRC has also signed off on the Shenzhen-Hong Kong exchange link and loosened curbs on stock index futures.

    While Liu has shown few signs of urgency on two items at the top of investor wish lists — comprehensive IPO reform and entry into MSCI Inc.’s global equity indexes — he signaled at the briefing that this will be a year of “progression” for the regulator.

    “In 2016, the CSRC’s main goals were to restore stability and confidence,” said Rajiv Biswas, Asia-Pacific chief economist at IHS Markit in Singapore. “In 2017, the focus is expected to shift to managing financial risks as well as progressing with reforms at a gradual pace.”

    New initiatives have become more palatable for regulators now that markets have steadied. The Shanghai Composite has been up more than 20 percent from last year’s low, while price swings in the gauge have shrunk to the smallest in more than two decades. China’s bond market and the yuan have also stabilized after bouts of weakness at the end of 2016.

    “The absence of crisis and a more stable environment is an accomplishment,” said Karine Hirn, a partner at East Capital Asset Management in Hong Kong. “There was an important need to restore confidence.”

    Liu, who was formerly chairman of Agricultural Bank of China Ltd. and a deputy governor at the People’s Bank of China, replaced Xiao Gang at the CSRC just weeks after a botched attempt to introduce stock market circuit breakers in January 2016.

    Liu moved quickly to restore confidence by encouraging local funds to buy.

    He also vowed to take on the “crocodiles” and “barbarians” of China’s capital markets. During his short time in office, the government has imposed heavy penalties on market manipulators, including a 12.05 billion yuan (US$1.75 billion) fine against former hedge fund manager Xu Xiang and his collaborators, China’s largest ever for individual economic crimes. Liu said during the Feb. 26 press briefing that regulators imposed more than 200 administrative measures last year against securities firms, fund managers and others who were found to be acting improperly.

    While the Shenzhen link and plans to roll out new hedging products have been greeted positively by investors, more dramatic reforms appear unlikely before a twice-a-decade leadership reshuffle toward the end of 2017.

    In the meantime, the CSRC is likely to move forward cautiously, according to Christopher Balding, an associate professor at the HSBC School of Business at Peking University in Shenzhen.

    “I would expect them to tentatively push some of these issues, but very tentatively,” Balding said. “They are probably looking to signal a return to normalcy without making significant changes.” (SD-Agencies)

 

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