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China's Xi turns to financial experts to tame economic risks

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SINGAPORE/BEIJING (Reuters) - As China struggles to deal with the slowdown of the world’s second-largest economy, it has embarked on a new strategy of placing financial experts in provinces to manage risks and rebuild regional economies.

Since 2018, President Xi Jinping has put 12 former executives at state-run financial institutions or regulators in top posts across China’s 31 provinces,regions and municipalities, including some who have grappled with banking and debt difficulties that have raised fears of financial meltdown.

Only two top provincial officials had such financial background before the last big leadership reshuffle in 2012, according to Reuters research.

Among financial experts recently promoted is Beijing vice mayor Yin Yong, a former deputy central bank governor, and Shandong deputy provincial governor Liu Qiang, who rose through the country’s biggest commercial banks, from Agricultural Bank of China to Bank of China.

Another newly promoted official, Chongqing vice mayor Li Bo, had until this year led the central bank’s monetary policy department.

The appointments - overseeing economies larger than those of small countries - would appear to put those officials in the fast lane as China prepares a personnel reshuffle in 2022, when about half of the 25 members of the Politburo could be replaced, including Liu He, a vice-premier who is leading economic reform while doubling as chief negotiator in U.S. trade talks.

IN DEMAND
“Bankers are now in demand, as local governments are increasingly exposed to financial risks,” said Chucheng Feng, a partner at Plenum, an independent research platform in Hong Kong.

“These ex-bankers and regulators are given the task of preventing and mitigating major financial risks.”

The appointments have come as economic growth has slowed to its weakest in nearly three decades, while government infrastructure investment has fallen.

Five regional banks were hit with management or liquidity problem this year, raising the prospect of devastating debt bombs lurking in unexpected corners.

“We need to be well prepared with contingency plans,” the state Xinhua news agency said after a major annual economic meeting headed by Xi this month.


The economy faced “increasing downward economic pressure amid intertwined structural, institutional and cyclical problems”, the news agency said.

With pressures mounting, local governments are expecting to take the lead in managing their financial scares and cutting the cost of rescue with local intervention, analysts say.

“Appointing financial vice governors to provinces can help better integrate financial policies into local practice, and to prevent financial risks beforehand,” said He Haifeng, director of Institute of Financial Policy at Chinese Academy of Social Science, a government think-tank.

“Such appointments have also showcased a change of manner in official appointments.”

WORTH WATCHING
Financial executives were long shunned for leadership positions.

Banks were nationalized after the Communist Party took power in 1949 and many bankers were purged during the Cultural Revolution.

Xi started to stress the importance of financial expertise, and to elevate the status of executives, in 2017.

“Political cadres, especially the senior ones, must work hard to learn financial knowledge and be familiar with financial sectors,” Xi said in a national meeting on financial affairs.

Half of the 12 former financial executives elevated to provincial leadership posts under Xi were born after 1970.

Liaoning’s vice governor Zhang Lilin, 48, a veteran banker who spent two decades in the country’s third largest lender, Agricultural Bank of China, was appointed days after three state-controlled financial institutions announced investment in the then troubled Bank of Jinzhou.

A risk disposal plan for the lender was a milestone this year in resolving problems facing high-risk financial institutions.

Tan Jiong, 53, former deputy head of Industrial & Commercial Bank of China, the world’s largest lender by assets, was appointed in September to Guizhou.

The mountainous southwestern province is the most indebted province in China, according to a report from Guosen Securities, with a debt ratio of 161.7% as of the end of 2017.

To be sure, some top political figures had in the past cut their teeth in the finance industry.

Vice President Wang Qishan was governor of the state-owned China Construction Bank in the early 1990s.

But the increasing numbers of financial executives taking top jobs signals a new avenue for promotion in China’s one-party system, where leaders often spend years working their way up through provincial governments.

“For those who look beyond 2022, these officials are worth attention and they could be part of the new generation of leadership after Xi,” said Feng.

“Central government will likely keep these officials in the local governments and promote them, and they have a higher chance of moving up the ladder.”

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...-experts-to-tame-economic-risks-idUSKBN1YV0AT
 
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Factbox: Who's who of China's rising financial tsars

SINGAPORE/BEIJING (Reuters) - Since 2018, China’s President Xi Jinping has installed 12 former executives from government regulators or state-run financial institutions to top leadership posts across the country’s provinces, regions and municipalities.

The appointments appear to put them in the fast lane as China prepares for a leadership reshuffle in 2022.

Below are the 12 rising deputy provincial or municipal governors who are put on that track:

- Cai Dong, 51, Jilin province

A U.S.-trained banker who served two decades at Industrial and Commercial Bank of China (ICBC) (601398.SS)(1398.HK), the world’s largest lender by assets,before moving to one of China’s three “rust belt” provinces in October. In Jilin, Cai has to deal with the northeast province’s sluggish fiscal revenues and mounting fraudulent private lending cases.


- Wu Qing, 54, Shanghai city

A veteran securities official and former head of the country’s largest stock exchange. Known for his iron-fist approach to market irregularities. His new role as the Shanghai vice mayor requires his expertise to tackle hundreds of fraudulent lending firms and private equity bubbles.

- Yin Yong, 50, Beijing city

A trusted deputy of former central bank governor Zhou Xiaochuan who used to oversee the country’s foreign exchange flows. As Beijing’s new vice major, he is now managing the city’s financial issues, including the disposal of private financial conglomerates considered too big to fail.


- Kang Yi, 53, Tianjin city

A senior banker at state-owned China Construction Bank (CCB) (601939.SS)(0939.HK) who used to helm the lender’s local branch at the Three Gorges Dam,the world’s largest power station in terms of installed capacity. In Tianjin, Kang would have to deal with mounting debt woes and cross-defaults of city-backed commodity trader Tewoo Group, and serious corruption among local banking institutions.


- Liu Qiang, 48, Shandong province

Once a senior state banker and economist, Liu is now the youngest deputy ministry official in the Shandong provincial government. He shares a similar profile to Guo Shuqing, a former state banker who was also governor of Shandong province and now the head of the banking regulator. Liu would have to deal with the bailout of the province’s largest lender Hengfeng Bank, and default contagion risks among local private firms.

- Li Yunze, 49, Sichuan province

A former senior executive vice president of ICBC who is seen as an expert on equity investment. Li, who majored in Marxism in college, is overseeing difficult ownership reform of Chengdu Rural Commercial Bank, once controlled by the troubled conglomerate Anbang Insurance Group.

- Guo Ningning, 49, Fujian province

Guo is the first female vice-president of the 68-year-old Agricultural Bank of China (AgBank) (1288.HK)(601288.SS). The graduate of the elite Tsinghua University spent two years at the Singapore branch of Bank of China (3988.HK)(601988.SS), led the bank’s international operations, which included issuing bonds for Belt and Road Road projects. In Fujian, President Xi’s powerbase, Guo is facing loosely regulated cloud-funding activities for property purchases and rising household debts.



- Zhang Lilin, 48, Liaoning province

Zhang, who holds a PhD in the history of western economic thought, once served as the vice-head of CCB, having spent much of his career at AgBank in a range of management roles, including credit card operations and the Hong Kong branch. Now he faces the tough task of reducing financial risks. Those challenges include restructuring the bailed-out Bank of Jinzhou (0416.HK), and managing a liquidity crisis after a bank-run at Yingkou Coastal Bank.


- Wu Wei, 50, Shanxi province

The only official among the 12 with a banking background who is also in charge of provincial social welfare issues. After a brief career at the central bank as a graduate, Wu spent 21 years in different roles at the Bank of Communications (BoCom) (3328.HK)(601328.SS) before becoming the bank’s vice president.


- Li Bo, 47, Chongqing city

Stanford-trained and formerly a New York-based lawyer, Li joined the central bank in 2004 and helped draft regulations on money laundering, cross-border transactions and credit reporting. Li is now dealing with the city’s grassroot micro lenders, and massive defaults on bills issued by the financing arm of Lifan Industry Group.

- Tan Jiong, 53, Guizhou province


Once the head of the Bank of China’s Tibet branch, Tan is now a vice governor of the country’s most indebted province, Guizhou. Tan will have to deal with the liquidity strains caused by the province’s huge spending on infrastructure projects.

- Ge Haijiao, 48, Hebei province

Ge, who holds a PhD in management, spent two years in Singapore as the general manager for AgBank. Ge now has to face insolvency and debt problems of steel mills and other manufacturers in the northern province.

https://www.reuters.com/article/uk-china-politics-finance-leaders-factbo/factbox-whos-who-of-chinas-rising-financial-tsars-idUKKBN1YV0AR
 
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Well, they are smart enough to leverage US trained talent.
What kind of a statement is that? You could continue that ad infinitum and say amoebic knowledge is found behind everything.
Let him have its moment of feigning with smugness over his insecurity, after biting bluntly into the U.S. regime mouthpieces eyerolling obvious trick to fill the heads of gullible Americans with missinformation and keep their population as stupid, ignorant and delusional as it already is, and making exactly the leap of an ignorant assumption they want sheep to make putting that onesided and missleading phrased credit all up there to frame the report.

It must be hard to rationalize Americas demand for countless Chinese scientists for all the "American" top to bottom science and tech R&D projects while simultaneously pushing the image of Chinese only being thiefs that cant do R&D and only siphon from that very same "American" research every other day.

Granted its not much of a shame for the average American to be a total ignorant about the fact where Chinese top bankers and managers where actually educated or have worked overseas and not question these statements from knowing better. It would happen to most Chinese too, except luckily we arent served garbage like Reuters as "professional journalism" every day outside of Hong Kong.
 
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How selective when only 2 are US based and you think all credit is goes to US experience? Why ignore most are banker in China? Selective , I guess... :enjoy:

Hey I’m sure it all evens out. Maybe if we look for some top bankers who are brought in to solve problems in Europe and the US we will find 20% of them trained in top rated banking schools in China...:enjoy:....oh wait..maybe not.
 
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Hey I’m sure it all evens out. Maybe if we look for some top bankers who are brought in to solve problems in Europe and the US we will find 20% of them trained in top rated banking schools in China...:enjoy:....oh wait..maybe not.
Just a hint to not keep embarassing yourself: In that list 50% of the ones brought in to the U.S. to solve problems in the U.S. have been trained in top rated schools in China.
 
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Let him have its moment of feigning with smugness over his insecurity, after biting bluntly into the U.S. regime mouthpieces eyerolling obvious trick to fill the heads of gullible Americans with missinformation and keep their population as stupid, ignorant and delusional as it already is, and making exactly the leap of an ignorant assumption they want sheep to make putting that onesided and missleading phrased credit all up there to frame the report.

It must be hard to rationalize Americas demand for countless Chinese scientists for all the "American" top to bottom science and tech R&D projects while simultaneously pushing the image of Chinese only being thiefs that cant do R&D and only siphon from that very same "American" research every other day.

Granted its not much of a shame for the average American to be a total ignorant about the fact where Chinese top bankers and managers where actually educated or have worked overseas and not question these statements from knowing better. It would happen to most Chinese too, except luckily we arent served garbage like Reuters as "professional journalism" every day outside of Hong Kong.

Name a Chinese product or industry that has revolutionized the world in modern times?

You live in an American world. From your personal computer, to the Internet your using, to the airplanes you hear flying overhead, to the air conditioning cooling the home/building your in, to the jeans you see people wearing everyday. And countless other examples.

You can have your Chinese “high IQ.”
 
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