Monday, November 9, 2015

G-20 finalises tools for ending 'too big to fail' banks

G-20 finalises tools for ending 'too big to fail' banks

[LONDON] Global regulators set out their "final tools" on Monday for ending the phenomenon of "too big to fail" banks, seeking to draw a line under a period of intensive rule making after a financial crisis that tarnished the sector and weighed heavily on taxpayers.
Mark Carney, chairman of the Financial Stability Board (FSB), which coordinates regulation across the Group of 20 economies (G-20) to plug gaps highlighted by the 2007-09 financial crisis, said many of the key reforms have been implemented decisively and promptly. "As a consequence, the financing capacity to the real economy is being rebuilt and significant retrenchment from international activity has been avoided," Mr Carney said in a letter to G-20 leaders ahead of their summit next week.
The G-20 tasked the FSB in 2009 with introducing a welter of reforms from increasing bank capital requirements to shining a light on derivatives markets and curbing bankers' bonuses.
Mr Carney, who is also Governor of the Bank of England, said the board has now finalised the tools needed to wind down "too big to fail" banks in an orderly way if necessary, seen as the last major financial reform of the crisis.
G-20 leaders meeting next week in Turkey will be asked to endorse a reform that requires the world's 30 top banks to issue a buffer of bonds by 2019 that can be written down to raise funds equivalent to 18 percent of risk-weighted assets, if the lender goes bust.
The buffer, known as total loss-absorbing capacity or TLAC, is in addition to the minimum core capital requirements a bank must already hold.
The aim is to allow a big bank to fail without creating the kind of mayhem in markets seen after Lehman Brothers bank went bust in 2008.
As flagged, the basis for calculating how much TLAC the big banks must hold has been scaled back. An open-ended exemption for the big banks from emerging markets like China has also been scrapped in favour of a longer phase-in. "Countries must now put in place the legislative and regulatory frameworks for these tools to be used," Mr Carney said in a letter to G-20 leaders.
Banks had warned that the new capital rules being rolled out made it too expensive in some cases to keep markets as liquid as they were before the crisis by offering to buy and sell bonds at any time.
The FSB has completed its first review of all the rules that have been introduced and said it has "not found evidence of significant unintended consequences to date". "Evidence is mixed, and the baseline for comparison should not be the unsustainable excess liquidity that existed prior to the crisis," Mr Carney said.
The FSB is still assessing the risks to financial stability from the activities of big asset managers and will publish recommendations "as necessary in the first half of 2016".
Misconduct at banks, such as trying to rig the Libor interest rate benchmark and currency markets, can create systemic risks, and the FSB has agreed an action plan to see if additional rules are needed.
REUTERS

China establishes direct trading pair between yuan and Swiss francs

China establishes direct trading pair between yuan and Swiss francs

[BEIJING] China will establish direct trading pair between yuan and Swiss francs in the interbank market, the China foreign exchange trading system operator said on Monday.
The trading pair will be effective from Nov 10, it said on its website (www.chinamoney.com.cn).
REUTERS

HSBC hopes to leapfrog rivals with new China partnership

HSBC hopes to leapfrog rivals with new China partnership

[HONG KONG] HSBC is seeking to overtake Western rivals in the race for a slice of China's US$4 trillion onshore bond market thanks to an investment banking partnership with a state-owned investor it announced last week.
Europe's biggest bank is late among foreign banks to the party in China's onshore investment banking market, where rivals like Credit Suisse, Deutsche Bank and Goldman Sachs established joint ventures with local players years ago.
But foreign banks have made limited inroads in China because of the restrictive licences handed out to the early entrants. Morgan Stanley Huaxin Securities, the top foreign player in China's onshore bond market this year, ranked 29th by proceeds raised, just ahead of UBS, according to Thomson Reuters data.
The move is not without risk in a slowing economy with a heavily indebted corporate sector, but HSBC, which is exploiting new rules that favour Hong Kong-funded lenders, will have an extensive licence and will not be bound by the 49-per cent ownership cap normally imposed on foreigners.
And while rivals partnered with smaller local brokerages, HSBC's partner is the Chinese government itself. "The other banks have had a 10-year headstart and not gotten very far, and I think HSBC could be the tortoise to their hares and get ahead despite a slower start," said Keith Pogson, Asia head of financial services at EY.
CEO Stuart Gulliver said last week HSBC aims to establish a foothold in issuing bonds in China, part of a potentially risky strategy to expand in the country's export-oriented Pearl River Delta industrial zone, despite China's slowing economic growth.
HSBC will work with Shenzhen Qianhai Financial Holdings, the state investment fund arm of a development zone bordering Hong Kong that has been earmarked by the government for investment.
The venture is subject to regulatory approval, HSBC said.
Existing joint ventures set up by foreign investment banks in China have mostly foundered, with bankers privately blaming the lack of majority ownership and a requirement to partner with weak local firms rather than top-tier players.
A Reuters analysis of data from China's securities regulator showed that between 2007 and 2014 they made an average loss of 21 million yuan a year.
HSBC hopes to avoid that by building from scratch an onshore venture that it will control and run. "The benefit of this approach is we can build this venture to our global standards of governance and technology," said Gordon French, head of global banking and markets in Asia Pacific for HSBC.
Ratings agencies have nevertheless expressed concerns that the breakneck speed of China's corporate bond market while the economy slows could lead to a boom in defaults that might destabilise markets.
China's corporate debt-to-GDP rose to 160 per cent, with total borrowings of US$16.1 trillion in 2014, twice that of the United States, and could rise to US$28.5 trillion in 2019, according to Standard & Poor's. "Rapid debt growth, opacity of risk and pricing, very high debt to GDP, and the moral hazard risk of the Chinese market make it a high risk to credit," the rating agency said in July.
That could make it difficult for HSBC to build a profitable business while adhering to its costly global compliance standards.
The biggest challenge to HSBC's attempted push will come from local players, with their huge branch networks and the advantage of incumbency. "The domestic houses are well established with strong balance sheets and financial muscle, which will make it hard for new players to break into this market and make it a profitable business on a standalone basis," said Louis Kuijs, analyst at Oxford Economics.
REUTERS

Two teams awarded design proposals for Rail Corridor

Two teams awarded design proposals for Rail Corridor

The Urban Redevelopment Authority (URA) announced today the Rail Corridor Request for Proposal awards, and launched an exhibition of the awarded proposals where the public can give feedback.
The Rail Corridor was land previously used by Malaysia's Keretapi Tanah Melayu or KTM railway. The land was returned to Singapore in 2011. The 24-kilometre track runs from Woodlands to Tanjong Pagar.
Japanese design firm Nikken Sekkei Ltd and local landscape firm Tierra Design were awarded the Concept Master Plan. Their design proposal was able to strengthen the Rail Corridor's identity, connectivity, landscape and heritage, while providing a more inclusive and vibrant public space.
The Concept Designs for an urban-green-blue tapestry at Choa Chu Kang was awarded to Singapore's MKPL Architects and China's Turenscape International. The team proposed transforming a stretch of the Rail Corridor into a linear forest, as well as building housing located near it.
MKPL Architects and Turenscape were also awarded the Concept Designs for the adaptive reuse of the Tanjong Pagar Railway Station. The team proposed creating an additional entrance and exit for the future Circle Line Cantonment Station which will be linked to the former Railway Station.
The exhibition is now on at the URA Centre Atrium, till Nov 28. The public are encouraged to give their feedback to the design proposals.

Silence is golden: China tightens screws on online music

Silence is golden: China tightens screws on online music  

[BEIJING] China is tightening control of online music, paying particular attention to content and jacking up already tight censorship of the Internet.
From Jan 1, companies offering online music should police content before making it available, the Ministry of Culture said on its website. China's three biggest Internet companies, Alibaba Group Holding Ltd, Tencent Holdings Ltd and Baidu Inc all have music streaming platforms.
This edict is the latest strike in a multi-year campaign to "cleanse" both the Internet and culture more broadly of material the ruling Communist Party might deem a threat to China's stability. The country already operates what experts say is one of the world's most sophisticated online censorship mechanisms.
Baidu declined to comment. Alibaba and Tencent were not available for immediate comment.
The self-censorship system for music mirrors those currently in place at Internet companies, which employ large teams to scour the firms' websites and apps and eradicate sensitive material.
Academics and censorship experts say the self-policing, with punitive measures for failure to remove "harmful" content, encourages companies and individuals to be conservative and censor more than may be necessary, in order to avoid punishment.
Despite the crackdown, music industry professionals say that China is becoming an increasingly important market, especially as music streaming gains popularity and a growing middle-class pays for high-quality services.
The government has been trying to shake off the country's image as a market notorious for rampant music and entertainment piracy, issuing new regulations and punishments for offenders.
The ministry also asked online music platforms to submit information about their music to government officials from April 1.
In August, the ministry banned a list of 120 songs from being distributed online because they were "morally harmful".
A large chunk of the songs were made by a handful of hip-hop artists, mirroring Western countries' moral panic over rap in the 1990s and early 2000s.
REUTERS

Yahoo hires McKinsey to help with reorganization: Re/code

Yahoo hires McKinsey to help with reorganization: Re/code

[BENGALURU] Yahoo Inc has appointed management consulting firm McKinsey & Co to help with the reorganization of its core businesses, technology news website Re/code reported on Monday.
McKinsey will help Yahoo decide which units to shut, sell or invest in, Re/code said, citing several people close to the situation. Yahoo, which is preparing to spin off its 15 per cent stake in Alibaba Group Holding Ltd, and McKinsey were not immediately available for comment.
REUTERS

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