China has chalked up a remarkable achievement in reforming its
banking industry, said Vice Chairman Tang Chuangning of the China
Banking Regulatory Commission in Beijing Sunday.
"The successful reform of China's state-owned commercial banks
has greatly improved the international image of Chinese banks," he
said at an annual meeting on Asian finance in the 21st century.
After the successful IPOs (initial public offering) of the Bank
of Communications and China Construction Bank in 2005, the Bank of
China and the Industrial and Commercial Bank of China successfully
listed on the Hong Kong and Shanghai stock markets this year, he
said.
The Industrial and Commercial Bank of China, the biggest company
on China's A-share market, created the world's largest IPO, he
said.
In previous decades, Chinese banks piled up a mountain of bad
debts as a result of reckless, government-ordered lending to
state-owned enterprises.
Almost all major Chinese banks have formulated plans to become
joint-stock companies and seek market listing to help streamline
operations.
In line with a WTO (World Trade Organization) commitment, China
will fully open its financial markets to foreign competition by the
end of this year.
"The joint-stock reforms have spurred Chinese banks to
improve their corporate governance, risk management and internal
controls, and their financial, debt and human resource management,"
Tang said.
The capital adequacy ratios of 10 listed commercial banks now
exceed 8 percent, according to Tang, who also mentioned progress in
reforming credit cooperatives in both urban and rural areas.
China is well on the way to fully opening its banking sector, he
said. By the end of September 2006, over 70 foreign banks from 22
countries had set up 252 subsidiary banks and sub-branches as well
as 242 operational organizations and representative offices in
China, and their assets accounted for 2 percent of the total assets
of the Chinese banking industry.
A total of 18 overseas strategic investors have bought in to
twenty-five Chinese commercial banks, providing equity worth
US$18.1 billion, according to Tang.
The government will lift restrictions on Renminbi and
foreign-currency transactions by solely foreign-funded banks and
Sino-overseas joint venture banks when the new regulations on
foreign-funded banks come into effect on December 11.
The situation is different for Chinese branches of foreign
banks. Apart from exceptional cases where an individual, having
obtained the approval of the banking regulatory body, makes a fixed
deposit of no less than one million yuan (US$127,000), Chinese
branches of foreign banks are banned from offering Renminbi
services to Chinese citizens.
(Xinhua News Agency November 27, 2006)
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