BEIJING, April 15 (Xinhua) -- China's new regulations
on futures trading came into effect on Sunday, extending its coverage from
commodities futures trading to financial futures and option contract trading.
The new regulations, issued by the State Council on
March 16 this year, will lay a legal foundation for the introduction of stock
index futures, foreign exchange futures and option and other financial
derivatives, which will provide financial institutions with much-needed tools to
hedge risks.
Objectives in a commodities futures trading include
farm produce, industrial products, energy sources and related index product,
while a financial futures trading involves securities, interest rates, exchange
rates and related index products.
The regulations no longer prohibit financial
institutions from doing futures trading or raising funds and offering securities
for futures trading.
Seeing that securities dealers, fund management
companies and commercial banks will become the major participants in the
financial futures market, futures companies are considered as financial
institutions in the regulations.
According to the regulations, 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.
The regulations prescribe a series of measures to
strengthen the supervision of the futures market in order to ensure its stable
and healthy development, said Shi Jianjun, vice president of the China Futures
Association.
The China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC),
the country's securities market watchdog, has the authority to carry out
investigations into the market participants and examine their transaction and
financial data and bank accounts.
Fan Fuchun, vice chairman of the CSRC, said last
month that China 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 (CFFE), which was inaugurated in September 2006 to become the country's
first financial derivatives exchange.
China's futures market, composed of Shanghai Futures
Exchange, Dalian Commodity Exchange and Zhengzhou Commodity Exchange and CFFE,
turned over a record 21 trillion yuan (2.69 trillion U.S. dollars) last year.
Commodities traded on the country's futures market
include corn, soybean meal, sugar, zinc and natural
rubber.