A World Bank report notes that to make the most of the
US$1.6 trillion in foreign reserves and US$9.6 trillion in domestic
financial sector assets, East Asia needs to further diversify its
financial markets by developing its securities markets.
The new World Bank report, "The Road to Robust East Asian
Financial Markets", was released in Singapore yesterday
argues that East Asia needs and is well
positioned to enhance its financial systems to meet the growing and
increasingly sophisticated demand for financial intermediation in
the region.
"East Asia's financial system has witnessed a
remarkable transformation over the past decade in two important
respects," said Dr Homi Kharas, the World Bank's Chief Economist
for East Asia and the Pacific. "The region has emerged more
resilient from the debilitating crisis of 1997. It has also
accumulated US$1.6 trillion in foreign exchange reserves and US$9.6
trillion in financial sector assets at the end of last year. These
assets reflect not only the resumption of large capital inflows but
also the region's own savings which amount to almost a quarter of
that of the US financial markets and half that of Japan. These
developments have reshaped the financial landscape in the region
that now provides an opportunity for deepening and extending the
reach of the financial sector."
The report examines the agenda if the financial sector
is to fulfill its role. It argues that the demands for financial
intermediation in the region are changing. In the past, the
financial sector focused largely on the needs of the corporate
sector. But as per capita incomes rise, the sector will face
growing demands from consumers. At the same time, businesses in the
region are looking for a broader range of services, including
investment banking services. And with the deepening of
intra-regional trade, firms will require cross-border financial
services.
A vibrant East Asian financial sector, according to
the report, should have at least three characteristics:
• highly diversified in its ability to cater to the
needs of increasingly complex and sophisticated
economies
• able
to provide financial services efficiently
• robust enough to withstand a variety of shocks in a
fast changing globalizing world economy.
"A key challenge is the further development of
securities markets, particularly bond markets," said Swati Ghosh,
lead author of the report. "Deep and efficient securities markets
will make an important contribution to meeting more sophisticated
needs and to improving the resiliency of the financial
sector."
The report notes that although securities markets have
grown by 300 percent in the last nine years, the banking sector,
with US$5.5 trillion in assets, still dominates East Asia's
financial sector. The region's institutional investor base of
US$1.5 trillion is large, but has considerable potential for future
growth given the large pool of savings in commercial
banks.
To further develop the securities markets the report
stresses the need for greater liquidity and efficiency. It says
that the efficiency and liquidity of markets is affected by the
availability of information to price securities accurately, by high
transactions costs, and by the limited size and heterogeneity of
the investor base. To
enhance efficiency, the report notes, policy makers will need to
address each of these elements.
The report also notes that the emergence of
initiatives for regional financial cooperation is providing an
impetus for deepening and diversifying financial markets by
identifying impediments to cross-border investments, providing
greater liquidity, and facilitating issuance by private sector
participants. But the experiences with implementing the Asian Bond
Funds Initiative shows that measures also need to be taken at the
domestic level. Regional financial integration can significantly
enlarge the gains from domestic policy measures and make the
development of domestic financial markets more viable.
The agenda to strengthen securities markets and a more
robust financial system overall will require concerted efforts on
three fronts:
• Strengthening implementation of corporate governance
and information disclosure is extremely important to enable
investors to price securities accurately. Countries in the region
have made considerable progress in strengthening the legal and
regulatory framework around corporate governance and disclosure
requirements and in strengthening accounting and auditing standards
but greater focus on implementation and enforcement are
needed.
• Developing complementary or supporting infrastructure
such as repo markets, margin trading and derivatives. If developed
within an appropriate framework, these can be important means of
reducing transactions costs. It also allows market participants to
manage and transfer risks to those better able and willing to bear
them and so helps advance the development of robust financial
systems overall. The report also notes the potential danger of
inappropriate risk transfers—through the use of such
instruments--to institutions with weaker risk management capacity
and to more weakly regulated segments of the financial markets.
This is especially the case for transfers from private banks to
public banks and from banks to non-bank financial institutions.
Proactive measures by regulators are needed to monitor and contain
these risks.
• Developing a broader and more diversified investor
base. The participation of investors with different preferences and
appetites contributes to greater trading and liquidity and more
efficient markets. This will require further developing the
domestic institutional investor base—pension funds, insurance and
mutual funds—as well as fostering greater regional financial
integration.
(China Development Gateway
September 15, 2006)
|