blogs  
 
yournews
   
 
Video Photos Finance Travel Weather Discussion TV Shows
| |
 
  Home ›
 
Business News

 

Hong Kong's SFC seeks to impose tighter investment regulations
By Channel NewsAsia's Hong Kong Correspondent Leslie Tang | Posted: 30 November 2009 2308 hrs

  Martin Wheatley
 
Photos  of

   
 


HONG KONG: Hong Kong's securities regulator said on Monday that its responsibilities do not include taking risk out of the system, in the aftermath of the Lehman Minibond scandal.

But to avoid a repeat of last year's fiasco, the Securities and Futures Commission (SFC) has proposed new investment regulations which are up for public consultation until end-December.

The Lehman Minibond saga rocked Hong Kong's status as an international financial centre. Many blamed the city's financial regulators for failing to prevent the fiasco. A year later, the SFC is still on the defensive.

Martin Wheatley, CEO of SFC, said: "If it's imposed on us, the burden of accessing risk for all of you and your clients and the man on the street, then you can assure yourselves that the product range that's available in Hong Kong will disappear, completely disappear.

"It's not our job to take risk out of the system. It's our job to make sure that features are properly disclosed and that intermediaries act according to a set of good principles, which are about acting in the interest of the investor."

More than 30,000 Hong Kong investors bought about US$1.5 billion worth of the structured products, which became virtually worthless when Lehman went bust last September.

This sparked protests by mostly elderly investors who said they did not understand what they were buying and had lost their life savings in the process.

To avoid a repeat of the debacle, the SFC is seeking to impose tightened investment guidelines. It is proposing clearer documentation on products, so investors are better informed.

The regulator has also suggested redefining categories of investors and banning the selling of complicated products with derivatives to regular "retail" investors.

Another proposal is a "cooling off" period during which investors can back out of their investments, but they must pay a penalty fee.

Members of the public have up to the end of December to give their feedback on the SFC's proposals. If the market endorses the consultation paper, the new rules could be implemented next year.


- CNA/so

 


Other business News
Eurozone sets conditions for Greek bailout
Banks agree US$25b deal for US homeowners
China releases Jan trade data
Flights back to normal Friday after strike: Air France
M'sia trade expected to grow at slower pace
US stocks gain on Greece, bank mortgage deal
Euro edges up as Greece inks reform deal
Oil prices rise on Greek deal
Eurozone stalls Greek cash aid pending new conditions
China says January exports expected to have dropped
Greece says agreement reached on austerity measures: ECB
ECB holds key interest rate steady at 1.0%
OPEC cuts 2012 oil demand forecast
China's January inflation hits 3-month high
Spain's economy to worsen in Q1
Indonesia cuts interest rate to record low
Malaysia sees record trade in 2011
Rio Tinto earnings down 59% on aluminium write-down
Asia stocks mixed on Greek fears, China inflation
China's Alibaba raising US$3b for Yahoo! stake

 

 
Affiliate Sites:
 
About Us  |  Contact Us  |  Advertise with Us  |  Terms & Conditions