THE country’s foreign exchange regulator said Friday that it will steadily push forward with the convertibility of its capital account, and at the same time fend off risk from cross-border capital flows. The head of the State Administration of Foreign Exchange (SAFE), Pan Gongsheng, made the comments in a meeting with foreign companies on deepening China’s foreign exchange reforms and improving business conditions. Foreign firms that participated in the meeting in Beijing included HSBC, Standard Chartered, DBS, Deutsche Bank, auditing firm PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP, BMW and Schneider Electric. In recent weeks, China said it will resume two key outbound investment programs, allowing domestic financial institutions to invest in overseas securities. The suspension of those outbound investment programs came after gyrations in Chinese stock and currency markets in 2015 prompted a capital flight that led the government to burn its vast foreign exchange reserves by nearly US$1 trillion to shore up the yuan and reduce outflows. China had also stepped up its crackdown on outbound investment deals that authorities suspected were highly speculative and were being used to circumvent capital controls. Over the past year, Chinese equities have steadied while the yuan has gained against the U.S. dollar, easing worries over potentially destabilizing capital flight. Outbound investment deals have also seen double-digit growth in the first quarter this year after falling 29.7 percent in 2017. China’s forex regulator last month also widened the quotas of two other outbound investment programs in Shanghai and Shenzhen as part of the government’s efforts to liberalize financial markets. (SD-Agencies) |