Logwritten
SATURDAY, MAY 26, 2012 9:35 AM IST

Beijing: The Chinese central bank has ordered city commercial banks to stop lending to non-financial firms for conducting arbitrage business between the primary and secondary bond markets, banking sources said on Thursday.

The People’s Bank of China, at a meeting with 31 city commercial banks on Wednesday, also ordered these banks to stop bond intermediary and deposit businesses that do not involve money, the sources said.

 People’s Bank of China in Beijing, China (File photo Bloomberg)

People’s Bank of China in Beijing, China (File photo Bloomberg)

“The move implies that the PBOC is worried about the risk of default in China’s bond trading and clearing system, and its determination to tighten supervision,” said one source who has close ties with the central bank.

The meeting was organized by the National Association of Financial Market Institutional Investors (NAFMII), an industry organization entrusted by the PBOC to help supervise the country’s bond market.

NAFMII in a report on Thursday confirmed the convention of the meeting but did not give details of the businesses now under tighter central bank supervision.

The sources said the PBOC and the National Audit Office had also launched an investigation into existing transactions.

Tags - Find More Articles On:
READ MORE ARTICLES BY:
blog comments powered by Disqus
Sebi curbs consent option
New norms are aimed at matching the gravity of the offence with penalties levied by the market regulator
Singh’s visit aimed at closer ties with Myanmar
Manmohan Singh will arrive in Nay Pyi Taw on Sunday and hold talks with President Thein Sein, others
ITC profit up 26% on price hike
The results should be viewed in the context of an economic slowdown, high inflation and the cascading...
2G scam | Promoters of Essar and Loop charged, get bail
The framing of charges by the special court of justice O.P. Saini, who is presiding over the 2G scam...
Anonymous hackers to attack from 9 June
Anonymous, the so-called hacktivist collective, had targeted Big Cinemas