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Bank governor pledges reform (China Daily) Updated: 2005-05-14 11:11 The governor of China's
central bank defended the necessity of early public offerings in the Bank of
China (BOC) and China Construction Bank (CCB) on Friday, pledging to press ahead
with reform.
Speaking at the release of the 2005 Bluebook of Finance in China, governor of
the People's Bank of China (PBOC) Zhou Xiaochuan chided sceptics who hold there
should be no haste in listing the banks and that the focus should lie on
internal reforms and control instead.
"The next stages in the reform of State-owned banks -joint-stock
restructuring, the ushering in of strategic investors, and stock market listings
- are key steps and important milestones of reform," said Zhou.
China is accelerating reform of its four State-owned commercial banks, which
still dominate the local banking system.
Authorities picked the BOC and CCB more than one year ago for pilot
joint-stock restructuring programmes and recapitalized the two with a combined
US$45 billion.
The two banks are now both planning initial public offerings in overseas
stock markets and are talking with potential overseas strategic investors.
The Industrial and Commercial Bank of China also won a US$15 billion capital
infusion last month.
But the Financial Times reported on Thursday that the BOC's share offering
will be delayed until next year because its restructuring and search for a
foreign strategic investor have yet to be completed.
Some analysts have expressed pessimism about the pilots, saying little
concrete progress has been made. But according to Zhou, a public stock offering
will substantially push ahead key reforms such as building efficient incentive
systems and ending administrative interference.
"The reform of large State-owned enterprises showed that, in the process of
joint-stock reform, particularly in becoming listed companies, all the reforms
were very much accelerated," Zhou said.
"Listing is not the end of reform, not even half the job, but it's a
milestone," he added.
Aside from other difficulties, China's banking reformers are facing the
challenge of bringing the sector's capital adequacy up to international
standards.
The "2005 Bluebook, " which was compiled jointly by the Chinese Academy of
Social Sciences' Institute of Finance and Banking and the China Development
Bank, says China's banking sector will need more than 200 billion yuan (US$24
billion) of capital each year if it is to meet a minimum 8 per cent capital
adequacy requirement by the end of 2007, as planned by the banking
regulator.
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