(Reuters)
- China's banking regulator will strengthen regulation of banks that use
faulty accounting practices to disguise losses on the high-yield investment
products that are increasingly replacing traditional deposits as banks' key
sources of funding.
Industry
insiders have long expressed concern about banks who aggregate
the proceeds from the sale of various wealth management products (WMPs) into
collectively-managed "fund pools", rather than clearly linking each
product to a specific set of underlying assets.
This
practice prevents banks from admitting losses, or possibly even learning about
them internally, because inflows from the sale of new products can be used to
deliver the promised returns on previously issued products.
The
swift rise of WMPs in recent years is generally positive for China's financial
system, said Yan Qingmin, assistant to the chairman of the China Banking Regulatory Commission
(CBRC). Yan's remarks from an industry forum on Tuesday were posted on the
commission's website.
"The
banking industry's wealth management business has channeled funds that might
otherwise flow into high-interest underground loans, illegal fundraising,
and commodity speculation
and has upheld financial stability," Yan said.
But
he said CBRC would remain vigilant against fund pools and other risks.
"Individual
banks have problems such as insufficient disclosures, inadequate risk warnings,
non-standard sales practices, and improper 'asset pool' wealth management business, which has blurred risk
awareness," he said.
Total
WMPs outstanding reached 7.4 trillion yuan ($1.2 trillion) by late January, up
from 7.1 trillion yuan at the end of 2012 and only 500 billion yuan in 2007,
the director of CBRC's innovative regulation department, Wang Yanxiu, said at
the forum, China Business News reported on Wednesday.
The
end-2012 total amounts to 7.3 percent of total bank deposits at that time. The
estimates do not include WMPs issued by trust companies.
The
rise of WMPs has been fueled by Chinese depositors' hunger for yields above the
central bank's benchmark deposit rate, currently set at 3.0 percent for one
year.
WMPs,
which are not subject to the cap on traditional bank deposit rates, are
typically backed by money-market instruments, bonds, corporate bills, or high-interest loans
to risky borrowers such as real-estate developers and local governments.
WMPs
that carry bank guarantees typically promise interest rates between three and
five percent, while non-guaranteed products sometimes promise 8 percent or
higher.
But
regulators and bankers themselves have expressed concern about the lack of
transparency about the underlying assets of WMPs.
In
a widely-noted opinion column published late last year, Bank of China chairman
Xiao Gang called for increased regulation of shadow banking and highlighted the
risk of the asset pool model.
"When
faced with a liquidity problem, a simple way to avoid the problem could be
through using new issuance of WMPs to repay maturing products. To some extent,
this is fundamentally a Ponzi scheme," Xiao wrote.
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