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Shang Fulin, chairman of China's
Securities Regulatory Commission, addresses the Lujiazui Forum 2008 in
Shanghai, east China, May 10, 2008. Heads of the People's Bank of China,
the country's central bank, the Securities Regulatory Commission, the
Banking Regulatory Commission and the Insurance Regulatory Commission all
attended the two-day financial forum, opened on May 9. Lujiazui is the
name of Shanghai's financial district.(Xinhua Photo) Photo
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BEIJING, May 11 -- China will learn from the U.S. subprime crisis and
further strengthen supervision on financial innovation to ensure the safe
operation of its capital market, the head of the country's stock market
regulator said on Friday.
We need to transfer the emphasis of supervision from the institutions
themselves to the businesses they are involved in, so that we can reduce the
supervision areas we neglected and raise efficiency," said Shang Fulin, chairman
of the China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC), at the Lujiazui Forum 2008
on Friday.
He said that the market regulator should carry out in-depth research into
innovative products and form an effective risk evaluation mechanism.
"The supervision should better balance the relations between safety and
efficiency, and the risks of innovative products to the real economy should also
be considered by each supervision institution," Shang said.
He added that the CSRC will continue work on the preparations and launch
the long-awaited stock index futures and growth enterprise board in a "prudent
manner."
"We will push forward construction of the financial derivatives market and
complete a cross-market supervision coordination system," he said.
Analysts said that the launch of financial innovation products, such as
stock index futures, margin trading systems for stockbrokers and covered
warrants, should be introduced in line with the actual development of China's
capital market.
"The exact time to introduce innovative products, which will be considered
by supervision sectors, should be in line with the actual market development,
and certain factors, such as a sound and effective regulatory framework, must be
taken into full account," said Zhu Haibin, an analyst at Essence Securities.
Shang also said that the capital market should make full use of its
function to provide capital support for innovation companies in their different
development periods, which is in line with the government's strategy to promote
innovation and adjustment of the economic structure.
The launch of the growth enterprise board on the Shenzhen Stock Exchange is
at its final stages, which is expected to provide fund support for small and
medium-sized companies.
Shang added that, at the current period of global resource re-allocation
and re-structure, the build-up of a strong capital market will help China
sharpen its competitive edge and attract more financial talent.
(Source: China Daily/by Jin Jing)
Greater controls set to protect
economy
BEIJING, May. 10 -- High inflation and fixed-asset
investment growth are China's biggest economic concerns, prompting authorities
to persist with a tight monetary policy, Vice-Premier Wang Qishan said on
Friday.
In an address to the Lujiazui Forum in Shanghai, Wang
also said the government would take specific measures, including prudent fiscal
policies and strengthened and refined macroeconomic controls, to curb an
overheated economy and inflation. Full story
Banker: Reducing trade surplus key to
growth
BEIJING, May 11 -- China needs to cut its high
savings rate to boost consumption and reduce the trade surplus, People's Bank
of China Governor Zhou Xiaochuan said Saturday.
"The government has pledged to boost consumption and
cut the surpluses in trade and capital accounts," Zhou said at the Lujiazui
Forum 2008 in Shanghai. That "requires that we reduce the current high savings
ratio," he said. Full story