The State Council, or China's cabinet, published on Friday the country's new
regulations on futures trading, extending its coverage from commodities futures
trading to financial futures and option contracts trading.
The new
regulations, which will come into effect on April 15 this year, no longer
prohibits financial institutions from doing futures trading or raising funds and
offering securities for futures trading.
Futures companies will be
considered financial institutions when securities dealers, fund management
companies and commercial banks become the major participants in the financial
futures market, said an official with the Legislative Affairs Office of the
State Council.
The Chinese futures market is required to improve its
risk control system by setting up a guarantee fund and an interest compensation
mechanism for futures investors, according to the regulations.
The
regulations, with the scope of application expanded, lay a legal foundation for
the introduction of stock index futures and strengthen the supervision of the
futures market, said Shi Jianjun, vice president of the China Futures
Association.
Fan Fuchun, vice chairman of the China Securities Regulatory Commission said earlier this month
that the country is likely to launch the trading of stock index futures in the
first half of 2007.
Simulation trading was started in October last year
to test the trading system at the Shanghai-based China Financial Futures Exchange, which was
inaugurated in September 2006 to become the country's first financial
derivatives exchange.
Currently investors can only profit when the stock
index goes up. With the introduction of index futures, investors will be able to
make money when the index falls.
Market watchers believe the
introduction of such derivatives will provide financial institutions with a
much-needed tool to hedge risks but may also spur speculation and widen
volatility.
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