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CBRC tells policy banks to beef up risk management

By Jiang Xueqing | China Daily | Updated: 2017-11-16 07:12

Latest regulations are part of efforts to implement directive on financial security

The country's top banking regulator has called on China Development Bank Corp and the Export-Import Bank of China to step up management of country risks, compliance risks and overseas lending risks, while they support Chinese companies expanding their business globally.

On Wednesday, the China Banking Regulatory Commission issued regulations for three State-owned policy banks, CDB, China Exim-Bank and Agricultural Development Bank of China.

Among them, CDB currently has six representative offices overseas, and China EximBank had three representative offices abroad, plus a branch in Paris, by the end of last year.

Zhou Minyuan, head of CBRC's policy banks supervision department, said at a news conference on Wednesday: "The CBRC required both banks to fully identify overseas business risks, step up compliance management, completely understand the operational and financial status of their clients as well as the laws and regulations of host countries, strictly observe the local environmental and industrial regulations, and strengthen communication with local regulators."

The CBRC demanded the banks enhance capital supervision via on-site inspections and investigations, effectively prevent and control overseas business risks by taking risk-sharing measures, prudentially evaluate the feasibility and compliance of relevant guarantee measures, and improve their emergency response mechanism.

"These banks should set clear goals and plans for development and determine their priority areas of service based on self-positioning," Zhou said.

Regulators will also set requirements on capital adequacy ratios for the three policy banks by taking reference of the requirements on commercial banks, said Xu Qinghong, deputy head of CBRC's policy banks supervision department.

"The banks need to establish their own capital management system, workflow and policies, to ensure that they can combat various risks with their own capital, and make a medium- to long-term capital plan," Xu said.

The CBRC required the banks to have an internal evaluation of capital at least once a year and build a sustainable capital replenishment mechanism.

The latest regulations are part of the CBRC's efforts to implement the central government's directive on the prevention and control of financial risks, said Hu Bin, deputy director-general of the Institute of Finance and Banking at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.

"The CBRC is trying to stop the transfer of problems associated with the real economy to financial institutions, prevent the Chinese banking sector from being significantly affected by external economic and political shocks, and take precautions to help policy banks avoid huge fines imposed by host countries' regulators for compliance issues."

He advised policy banks to make internal control policies and risk management strategies according to different countries and regions, different categories of business, and different types of risk while helping Chinese companies expand business in the economies related to the Belt and Road Initiative.

The total assets of the three policy banks amounted to 25.12 trillion yuan ($3.79 trillion) by the end of September, according to CBRC statistics. The banks extended loans of 1.42 trillion yuan to projects related to the Belt and Road Initiative and 2.36 trillion yuan to support Chinese companies going global.

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