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Foreign investors to deepen role in markets

China Daily Updated: 2019-01-02

Shirley Yu, senior vice-president and group general manager of Visa Greater China, said: "We believe that an open domestic market with a level playing field will not only benefit foreign investors who are operating in China but will benefit Chinese companies and consumers.

"Liberalizing the payments market would send a strong signal that China is committed to cooperation and continuing to move forward on reform and opening-up."

Yu said Visa hopes that the People's Bank of China and other agencies concerned will process all eligible domestic license applications in a timely and professional manner, according to the rules and regulations promulgated over the past few years.

"We expect that domestic market opening in the electronic payments sector will be a positive step toward further strengthening the US-China bilateral trade relationship," she said.

The global payments technology company has long-term commitment to China and is keen to make a significant contribution to the future of China's payments industry by bringing the very best of its global experience in innovation, as well as the risk and security capabilities it has built, which are essential to ensure trust and stability in the payments system, according to Yu.

"Visa recognizes the fast growth of payments technology and innovation in China, and we believe such an achievement was largely due to open collaboration and innovation across the ecosystem, both domestically and globally," she said.

Visa is expanding its partnerships and opening its global network to collaborate with Chinese fintech startups through application programming interfaces.

Experts stressed that in the long term, it is critical for China to further open its financial markets.

"As the second-largest economy today, it is a 'one way street' in terms of China's financial market opening-up," said Joe Ngai, managing partner of McKinsey China.

Ngai and his colleagues have already seen many positive developments, including the lifting of many foreign institutional investors' restrictions on investing in the Chinese mainland's markets, the inclusion and weighting of A shares in MSCI's indices, and the various stock connect and bond connect programs with Hong Kong.

There is also increasing easing of regulations on foreign ownership limits in various segments of the financial services sector, including asset management, securities, insurance and banking.

"Through facilitating more foreign participation in the financial system and creating a level playing field for foreign financial institutions, China's capital markets will develop faster and healthier," he said.

By the end of 2017, foreign banks' total assets accounted for only 1.32 percent of total assets of the Chinese banking sector. Foreign insurance companies also took a fairly small market share, with their total assets accounting for 6.71 percent of the total assets of the Chinese insurance sector, said Chen Wenhui, vice-chairman of the National Council for Social Security Fund and former vice-chairman of the China Banking and Insurance Regulatory Commission, at a financial forum in May 2018.

In the past, this lack of go-global strategy insulated the Chinese economy from global volatility. However, currency imbalances caused partly by the accumulated trade surplus, and continuous injections of liquidity in the domestic financial system while maintaining a not yet fully liberalized capital account have led to asset bubbles in real estate and stock market volatility, said Ngai.

"Moving more boldly ahead to integrate China's financial system with global markets would reduce the risk of excess domestic liquidity and relax the constraint of the so-called 'impossible trinity'-that is, simultaneously seeking to control monetary policy, exchange rates, and capital movement," he said.

"This would also have the benefit of developing a more global set of options for China's savers, including investment in OECD (or the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development) economies that are suffering from a savings gap. Domestic savers in China today continue to face a lack of investment options. Historically, Chinese households have tended to have lower rates of return on their financial investments than do their global counterparts."

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