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REPEAT:IMF Urges China Tighten Finll Regs Amid Complex Risks

Repeats Story Initially Transmitted at 01:00 GMT Dec 7/20:00 EST Dec 6
--Warns Of Contradiction Between Financial System Security, Development Policies
--Central Gov't Policies Not Being Fully Implemented by Local Governments
     BEIJING (MNI) - The International Monetary Fund recommended Thursday that
China tighten regulation of its financial sector as risks continue to rise amid
rapid growth of the sector.
     Expansion of monetary and fiscal policies, regulatory arbitrage by
financial institutions mixed with a rise of their offerings of increasingly
complex investment vehicles, and the proliferation of implicit guarantees for
financial products pose risks to China's financial system, the IMF said in its
latest Financial System Stability Assessment (FSSA) of China. 
     The FSSA, released every five years, aims to identify major financial risks
and offer recommendations for better policy making to enhance its economic
resilience.
     Government initiatives to buoy job creation and domestic growth, especially
by local governments, have hindered the closure of "non-viable firms" and
allowed substantial credit growth that has fueled a sharp rise in corporate and
household indebtedness, the Fund said.
     FINANCIAL RISKS HAVE PROLIFERATED
     Under tight regulation of the banking sector, regulatory arbitrage -- the
practice of moving riskier business practices to units supervised by less-strict
regulators -- along with the creation of increasingly complex investment
vehicles skyrocketed, resulting in the transfer of financial risks to non-bank
financial institutions (NBFIs) from banks, the Fund said. Some NBFIs, such as
insurance companies and asset managers, report faster growth of their investment
products under less stringent supervision, but banks are still interconnected
with these players, thus creating uncertain financial risks.
     Unreasonable guarantees by governments and financial institutions on
financial assets also pose moral hazard risks, though the Chinese government has
recently sped up new policies to tackle the problem, according to the FSSA
report. Financial institutions' reluctance to let retail investors suffer
investment losses, using implicit payment guarantees remain problematic even
though the People's Bank of China is clamping down on the practice. Continuing
expectations that the government would bail out and take accountability for debt
of local government financing vehicles (LGFVs) and state-owned companies (SOEs)
is another key contributor for overall systemic risks, the Fund said.
     CONTRADICTION BETWEEN FINANCIAL SECURITY AND PRO-GROWTH POLICIES
     The IMF praised the Chinese government's recent policy initiatives to
tighten controls on financial risk, but pointed out the contradiction between
the central government's goal to defend the safety of the financial system and
local governments' intentions to grow the economy and secure jobs could hold
back China's progress in restructuring and rebalancing its economy.
Implementation at the local level of policies issued by the central government
is lacking and so oversight needs to be strengthened, the Fund said.
     The nation's large credit overhang and the proliferation of shadow banking,
which international ratings agencies and international organizations have warned
about repeatedly when assessing China's economic health, must be resolved, the
report said.
     A clear government emphasis on prioritizing financial stability over
economic growth would help rein in risks, the Fund stressed.
     Regulators and oversight officials should be given sufficient legal
protection, independence and resources to effectively supervise the financial
sector, the Fund said. The newly established Financial Stability and Development
Committee (FSDC) has been mandated to ensure financial stability and to enhance
development, the Fund noted, arguing that this dual mandate may affect its
decision-making in setting policies to secure financial stability. The IMF
suggested China create a separate agency with the sole task of defending the
stability of the financial sector, even if it reports to the FSDC.
     Because Chinese banks remain the core of the nation's financial system,
bank capital should be gradually increased under a specific target to ensure
banks hold sufficient capital in line with their risk profiles and management
capacities, IMF said. This does not necessarily mean a an increase in the
regulatory capital ratio, the Fund noted, adding an increase in banks' profit
and a temporary reduction in their excess capital would help achieve the same
effect as a regulatory ratio cut. 
--MNI Beijing Bureau; +86 (10) 8532-5998; email: iris.ouyang@marketnews.com
--MNI BEIJING Bureau; +1 202-371-2121; email: john.carter@mni-news.com

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