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BEIJING, March 16 -- China is revamping its fledgling financial sector by
trying to create some blockbuster domestic groups that will be strong enough to
compete against the foreign giants.
The trend, which is likely to lead to companies with structures similar to
those of the Western full-service behemoths, will test China's risk-control
ability and prompt overseas investors to lobby harder for a market presence
before the playing field is leveled, analysts said.
Chinese banks, mutual funds, brokers and insurers, formerly prohibited from
crossing business categories, have received unprecedented government support
since last year to diversify into other sectors, making mergers and acquisitions
the new buzzwords.
"Helping domestic firms get bigger is now the theme," said Wu Zhiguo, a
Guohai Securities Co analyst. "As foreign investors are given wider access,
regulators believe domestic players are not strong enough to compete and need
help."
The worries were highlighted last year by the government's moves to let
three of its biggest banks set up fund ventures and pledged to expand the
program to more joint-stock lenders this year.
Sources also have said regulators are studying a plan to allow insurers to
buy into money management firms, while the government is drafting rules to
permit banks to establish insurance ventures.
Apart from spurring cross-industry developments, regulators are backing up
existing Chinese financial firms by other means, granting them loans and helping
them lock in acquisition targets.
CITIC Group, which controls banking, trust and insurance subsidiaries, last
year had its listed brokerage house CITIC Securities Co take a 60 percent stake
in a new broker restructured from debt-ridden Huaxia Securities Co.
Ping An Insurance (Group) Co, whose businesses cover insurance, securities
and banking, last year won government approval to invest in overseas assets and
relocate its banking arm to Shanghai to tap China's growing wealth.
The nation's No. 2 life insurer also is working on a new insurance unit
with London-based partner HSBC Holdings Plc and is currently involved in bids
for a controlling stake in Guangdong Development Bank.
China Merchants Bank, under control of China Merchants Holdings, is waiting
for regulatory approval to take a stake in its sister company, China Merchants
Fund Management, and it is also considering an investment in an insurance
venture.
"China is forming Western-style universal banks and has an urgent need to
upgrade risk-control systems to prevent misconduct," said Nelson Ying, chief
technology officer at Hong Kong's Tai Fook Securities Group.
"Overseas companies may find chances to join the wave with their expertise,
but failing to acquire a controlling stake is their biggest concern."
China currently caps foreign investments in its financial firms such as
banks and brokers at 25 percent on a combined basis and 20 percent for a single
suitor.
Lobbying for larger stakes has grown stronger this year as a group led by
Citigroup Inc is pursuing a bid to buy 85 percent of Guangdong Development Bank
while investment banks such as Morgan Stanley and Credit Suisse are considering
controlling holdings in Chinese brokers.
(Source: Shanghai Daily) |