BEIJING, Dec. 29 (Xinhua) -- The People's Bank of
China, or the central bank, on Friday issued new individual foreign currency
regulations, in a bid to facilitate individual foreign exchange transactions.
The regulations, which will come into effect on Feb. 1, 2007, impose an annual quota on foreign
exchange settlements of individuals, abolishing the previous limit for every
single settlement transaction.
For transactions within the annual quota, individuals
can handle foreign exchange settlements directly in a bank.
Beyond the quota, settlement transactions under
current account must go through the inspection of a bank and those under capital
account are subject to the foreign exchange authorities.
The annual quota will simplify the procedures for
individual foreign exchange settlements, said a central bank spokesman, adding
that China put an annual quota on foreign exchange purchases by individuals in
May, resulting in an increase of 210 percent in purchases in May to November
over the same period last year.
The new regulations aims to facilitate foreign
exchange flows in personal trade, by allowing individuals to open settlement
accounts and treating personal traders the same as trading companies.
No quotas are imposed on foreign exchange settlements
or the purchases of personal traders that are registered with the commerce
authorities.
The regulations also provide guidance for capital
account transactions of individuals.
Mainland residents can entrust banks, fund management
companies and other domestic financial institutions to invest in financial
products overseas, including stocks and bonds, according to the regulations.
The annual quota also applies to capital account
foreign exchange settlements and purchases of individuals.
China will gradually relax restrictions on capital
account foreign exchange transactions as the country continues to make the
Renminbi convertible under capital accounts, said the spokesman.
The foreign exchange authorities will strengthen the
monitoring of foreign exchange transactions, especially those that are big and
suspicious, and crack down on money laundering and other criminal activities,
said the spokesman.