Plenary 4. Capital Markets and Economic Development - New Avenues for the Financing of Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs)

Similar documents
Doing Business: Getting Credit and APEC

The Relative Significance of EPAs in Asia-Pacific

Division on Investment and Enterprise

Charting Brunei s Economy

FINANCIAL SECTOR REFORM

Financial Sector Development and Poverty Reduction. April 3, 2006

Advancing Good Corporate Governance by Promoting Utilization of the OECD Principles of Corporate Governance

Research Note. Asia-Pacific Derivatives Survey. April 2019

Comment on Masaki Kuwahara A Search for Potential Female Labor Forces in Japan s Aging Society Challenges for Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama

tariff global business nontariff barriers multinational corporation quota direct foreign investment trade barriers voluntary export restraints

The Next-Generation Interactive APEC Tariff Database

Southeast Asia: a SWOT analysis by the OECD

Global Economic Management and Asia s Responsibility Masahiro Kawai Asian Development Bank Institute

Charting Myanmar s Economy

Charting Mexico s Economy

Why Corporate Governance is Important in APEC Economies

How to Increase Bond Market Liquidity an AsianBondsOnline Survey

SBF ASEAN OUTLOOK SURVEY

Potential Effects of Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP) on the Philippine Economy*

Putting China s Capital to Work The Value of Financial System Reform

Enhancing Market Openness in Indonesia. Molly Lesher, OECD Trade and Agriculture Directorate

FINANCE TO ENSURE ASIA S ECONOMIC GROWTH DR. RANEE JAYAMAHA CHAIRPERSON - HATTON NATIONAL BANK PLC

Japanese Policy Response to the Dynamic Growth in Asia. January 17-18, 2011 Keisuke SADAMORI, METI

Contents. Introducing Global-KDIC KSP. Ⅱ Sharing KDIC s Experience. Lessons and Future Work

The landscape of Asian bank ownership The governance traits of Asian banks

Strategies for Successful Business in Asia Fasico is proud to be a partner of

Thailand and TPP 30 November 2012 Apiradi Tantraporn, Executive Chairperson The International Institute for Asia Pacific Studies (INSAPS), Bangkok

The Relative Significance of EPAs in Asia-Pacific

4th CREDIT REPORTING AND RISK MANAGEMENT TRAINING

MSMEs and Government Support in Korea. Credit Guarantee System in KODIT. Implications to Asia and the Pacific

ECONOMIC REFORM (SUMMARY) I. INTRODUCTION

The G20 Mexico Summit 2012 Key Issues for Asia-Pacific

Near-term growth: moderating, but no imminent hard landing. Vulnerabilities are growing along the current growth path

Strong Asian Growth. Asian Bond Markets Initiative

Overview of Challenges in SME Finance

Institutional Investors and Infrastructure Financing

Investment Management Association of Singapore. Annual Conference 2015

CBRE CAMBODIA SEA MARKET & VALUATION TRENDS 28 SEPTEMBER 2018

AOSSG comments on IASB Exposure Draft ED/2014/3 Recognition of Deferred Tax Assets for Unrealised Losses

Legal integration: the importance of UNCITRAL standards

Korea s Ease of Doing Business

Legal Review of FTA Tariff Negotiations

Session 5: In search of the meaningful market access what are the policy options for LDCs

Capital Account Controls and Liberalization: Lessons for India and China

Product Key Facts BlackRock Global Funds

Role and Challenges of Specialized Financial Institutions

Home & Community Care for Older People in ASEAN Member Countries

Developing Housing Finance Systems

China's Current Account and International Financial Integration

Ten years after: Implications of the current financial market turmoil. Dr. Atchana Waiquamdee Deputy Governor Bank of Thailand

Doing Business in. Karim Belayachi Co-author, Doing Business Project. Neil Gregory Acting Director, Global Indicators and Analysis WASHINGTON, DC

A Stocktaking and Comparative Assessment of Insurance Statistics in Selected Asian Countries: Preliminary Findings

Recycling Regional Savings for Closing Asia-Pacific s Infrastructure Gaps

PTA s INVESTMENT CHAPTER: THE JUXTOPOSITION OF THE INVESTMENT LIBERALISATION PROVISION

Current Status and Challenges. May 14, Shujiro URATA Waseda University

The Medium to Long-Term Economic Outlook for Asia

SEPTEMBER 2017 Global Opportunity Index: Global Investors Growing Focus on Asia

Exchange Traded Funds (ETFs): The New Packaged Product of Choice

Asia and the Pacific: Economic Outlook and Drivers

China s Securities Market Development: Lessons from Hong Kong and Other Asian Markets. Xiao Geng 1

Vietnam Looking Forward

Factoring Market Research& Asia Market Overview

Fiscal policy for inclusive growth in Asia

Morningstar Category Definitions

INTERNATIONAL REGULATION FOR ACCOUNTING

Rural and Agricultural Financial Products and Services. Module 7

Financing the MDG Gaps in the Asia-Pacific

Doing Business 2015 Fact Sheet: East Asia and the Pacific

Entrepreneurs, E commerce, and SMEs in APEC

Impacts on Global Trade and Income of Current Trade Disputes

A short history of debt

Japan-ASEAN Comprehensive Economic Partnership

Financial Institutions Profiles Series. Manulife Financial: A Leading Canadian Financial Services Company. (Table of Contents)

ASEAN-Korea Economic Relationship:

ECONOMIC OUTLOOK FOR SOUTHEAST ASIA, CHINA AND INDIA 2018:

Why is Financial Education Needed in Asia?

July 12, 2013 Hanoi,Vietnam

Parallel Session 5: FDI and development

ASIA IN THE WORLD ECONOMY: THREE POLICY CHALLENGES

Doing Business 2014 Fact Sheet: East Asia and the Pacific

A world in transition: PwC s 2017 APEC CEO Survey, November APEC CEO Survey. The Philippines findings.

Chikahisa Sumi Director, Regional Office for Asia and the Pacific International Monetary Fund

Advanced and Emerging Economies Two speed Recovery

MITBA CEO s Conference ASEAN Economic Community (AEC): Riding the Tsunami of Change JUNE 2015

Financing for Development in Asia and the Pacific: Opportunities and Challenges

A world in transition: PwC s 2017 APEC CEO Survey, November APEC CEO Survey. Malaysia s findings.

Principles for Product Transparency and Disclosure on Cross-Border Trade Settlement. June 2014

Presentation for Institutional Investors (FY16 1 st Half)

Co-operation in IPR: Perspectives from ASEAN

Yen and Yuan. The Impact of Exchange Rate Fluctuations on the Asian Economies. C. H. Kwan RIETI

Understanding Rural Finance Issues and the Macro and Micro Operating Environment. Module 2 Rural Finance & Microfinance Actors and approaches

Harnessing Globalisation to Build a Better World for the Benefit of All. Yose Rizal Damuri Centre for Strategic and International Studies

Presentation. Global Financial Crisis and the Asia-Pacific Economies: Lessons Learnt and Challenges Introduction of the Issues

NUMBER: November TPP11 and RCEP Compared

GLOBAL MOBILITY TRENDS IN ASIA

Joint Economic Briefing Impact of the Philippine Elections on Foreign Investments

[ 23 ] ASSET QUALITY. 1. The Impact of Self-Assessment

Interim Results August Leading the way in Asia, Africa and the Middle East

Asian Banking, Depositor Preference, and Deposit Insurance

2017 APEC CEO Survey Key Findings

Transcription:

Plenary 4 Capital Markets and Economic Development - New Avenues for the Financing of Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs) Mr. Andrew Sheng Chief Adviser, China Banking Regulatory Commission 12 April 2007

IOSCO Annual Conference Mumbai, India Panel 4: Capital Markets and Economic Development: New Avenues for the Financing of SME Andrew Sheng, Chief Adviser, China Banking Regulatory Commission Thursday, 12 April 2007

Definition of SMEs OECD definition:- independent companies that employ less than 250 employees In APEC, 70-80% of SMEs employ less than 5 persons. Within APEC, there are 49 million non-agriculture SMEs, half in China and Indonesia. 80% of SMEs are in services, 15% in manufacturing and 5% in agriculture. APEC Profile of SMEs 2003: Potential to add US$1 trillion in trade and US$150 bn in FDI in APEC if structural changes allow for a simpler, more business friendly, more integrated APEC economy to emerge.

SMEs are the Base and Backbone of Economies In developing countries, microenterprises represent: Over 80% of total enterprises Over 50% of urban employment Over 20% of GNP Main source of employment for poor people LARGE ENTERPRISES SMALL AND MEDIUM ENTERPRISES MICROENTERPRISES

Domestic Financing in East Asia is Bank-Dominated Despite the lessons of the Asian crisis and efforts to develop bond and equity markets, the Asian financial system remains bankdominated, with still fledgling bond markets, speculative stock markets and relatively small insurance and pension and social security systems. Source: Asia Bond Monitor November 2004

Equity, Bond, Insurance + Pension Markets Remain Relatively Under-Developed ASEAN Brunei Cambodia Indonesia Lao PDR Malaysia Myanmar Philippines Singapore Thailand Vietnam ASIA Others China Hong Kong SAR India Japan Korea, Rep. of Taiwan LATIN AMERICA Brazil Chile Mexico Bank Deposits a 1990 2004 n.a. 4.0 3 29.8 4.0 52.1 7.9 24.1 74.3 56.8 10.9 4 75.6 205.6 31.4 100.0 32.6 n.a. 15.3 1 28.2 14.1 OTHERS South Africa 48.3 SELECTED OECD ECONOMIES Switzerland 102.5 United Kingdom 87.8 United States 59.6 n.a. 14.4 38.9 17.3 88.7 8.9 5 48.4 104.4 79.7 48.1 177.8 299.3 51.1 120.5 68.8 n.a. 21.8 32.2 23.0 60.0 133.8 115.0 58.8 Equity Market b 1990 2004 4.4 24.9 100.7 152.6 20.6 30.6 95.8 149.0 29.2 72.3 2.4 1 40.3 107.2 486.3 10.4 48.4 121.7 73.2 48.2 56.1 107.6 135.3 6.7 46.9 38.3 108.6 10.6 21.9 120.8 170.5 70.6 217.6 85.2 123.0 57.5 131.6 Bond Market c 1990 2004 0.4 24.1 69.8 89.3 22.1 28.7 27.8 58.6 9.7 38.9 8.5 29.4 1.5 28.3 19.9 31.7 85.9 181.6 34.1 74.9 17.0 58.3 2.2 1 55.8 29.0 44.3 21.1 24.2 100.2 43.2 57.8 67.6 36.8 43.9 122.0 157.2 Insurance Premiums d 1990 2004 0.9 1.3 3.0 5.5 2.0 1.5 3.0 9.1 1.7 3.5 0.5 4 2.0 0.8 3.2 3.0 1 9.4 1.5 3.1 8.5 10.7 11.0 10.1 n.a. 14.2 1.4 3.0 2.7 4.3 1.1 1.8 9.6 14.4 7.8 11.7 9.6 13.8 8.3 9.4 Sources: CEIC data; World Bank, Financial Structure Dataset, February 2006 a. Bank Deposits/GDP b. Stock Market Capitalization/GDP c. Public and Private Bond Market Capitalization/GDP d. Life and Non-Life Insurance Premium Volume/GDP 1. 1992 data; 2. 1994 data; 3. 1995 data; 4. 1996 data; 5. 2003 data. n.a. denotes not available

Post-Asian Crisis, Banks have been cautious on SME lending In the search for profitability, banks have tended to concentrate on safer lending areas such as consumer finance, mortgage lending and asset management activities. SMEs find banks less user friendly, and so resort to:- Own funding Capital or loans from friends and relatives Money-lenders Banks now entering into SME field

Strengths of Banking Network New Credit-Scoring Skills manage risks better Wide range of banking products available, from individual loans, savings, working capital and capital investment loans Banks can service transactions and also intermediate counter-party risks Banks can act as wholesale funders to microfinance and SME financial institutions

Major Problems facing SMEs Lack of overall business skills Property rights unclear - insufficient assets for collateral High Transaction Costs - particularly for rural areas where communications and access to formal finance is difficult Information Asymmetry on Counter-party risks and access to market information Non-standardization of SME accounting makes risk measurement difficult for creditors and investors

Hernando de Soto - Fix Six Positive Property Effects 1. Protect property rights of poor, by efficient registration and low transaction costs 2. Provide poor with access to accurate market information 3. Making officials accountable 4. Making assets fungible 5. Networking people 6. Protecting transactions (through efficient trading system) No property rights = system is illiquid, not transparent, not accountable, not fungible, no network, no trading = no credit culture Hernando de Soto in The Mystery of Capital, 2000.

If Property Rights are unclear, SMEs cannot issue bonds, equity and derivatives SMEs in both urban and rural areas suffer from lack of clarity of property rights (property registry) that cause them to have high transaction costs and are perceived to have high risks Government therefore has a role to build Property Rights Infrastructure (Registry, Trading, Clearing and Payment systems) that clarify property rights and reduce transaction costs Lack of Credit Culture and Counter-Party Trust is due to lack of transparency and understanding of SME and their credit history. Technology can solve this through Credit Rating Agencies and ebay-type trading bulletins with trading/credit history built in.

SMEs generally do not have access to equity markets Principal reasons are Cost, Transparency and Risks Minimum costs of listings are quite high Hong Kong Growth Enterprise Market (GEM) listing fees and costs are minimum HK$1 million (US$130,000), equivalent to 3.3% of costs for HK$30 million (US$3.9 mln) GEM entry only for companies with annual turnover of HK$500 mln (US$64 mln) and minimum market capitalization of HK$150 mln at listing (US$19 mln).

Transparency and Compliance Costs are High for SMEs IASB is working on International Financial Reporting Standard (IFRS) for SMEs - still at Working Group Stage SMEs defined as employees not more than 50 and turnover of about 10 mln (US$13 mln) Even OECD is working on a simplified Corporate Governance Code for SMEs Main Issues How to simply recognition and measurement principles for SMEs? What to omit from IFRS for SMEs and make accounting for SMEs relevant?

Using Technology to Overcome Transparency and Cost Barriers Extended Business Relationship Language (XBRL) allows business reporting that is standardized to help reduce filing, analysis and reporting costs XBRL adopted for Chinese listed companies Creating Web-based Trading, Clearing, Settlement and Payment infrastructure for SMEs is now possible (variants of Business to Business webmodels for SMEs)

Creating OTC market for SMEs Tianjin City China is applying to State Council to create an OTC market for trading of equity in SMEs that do not qualify to meet requirements for listing on exchanges. Bohai Industrial Fund (US$2.5 billion) to create direct fund raising for modern, innovative manufacturing, high-tech projects and infrastucture construction.

Potential Technology Solutions to SME Access to Capital Markets Outreach (+) Standardized Info Credit-Rating + SME Registry SME Exchange? Regulation Lite? SME Venture Capital? Local OTC Equity Exchange Banks Credit Scoring + Incubator Efficiency (+)

Key Policy Measures for SMEs 1. Train SME through SME Business Schools 2. Liberalized interest rates, relying on competition and transparency to lower costs and rates 3. Build Financial Infrastructure that clarify property rights and reduce transaction costs 4. Use Market forces (banks, rating agencies, NGOs) to impose market discipline - regulatory burden on SMEs should be light but firm 5. Allow different types of SME legal structures to evolve (no ONE SIZE FITS ALL model) 6. Legal and judicial systems that support secured and unsecured lending 7. Common basic performance indicators, definitions and standards 8. Government s role Is enabler, not provider and competitor 9. Donor support to complement private capital, e.g., financing younger institutions, capacity building, innovation, institutional infrastructure and policy change

Building Blocks of Domestic Financial Markets That Work for the Poor Majority Policy Interest rates Financial sector policies Government policy Regulations, supervision Legal structures Legal systems Performance indicators Government role Donor support Industry Infrastructure Domestic capital markets Tech service providers Wholesale financial institutions MF networks, associations Rating agencies Credit bureaus Tech applications Payment systems Business services Financing Microfinance Domestic Capital Markets Savings mobilization Wholesale financing Bonds, securitizations Grants for smaller MFIs Guarantee mechanisms Transparency Healthy market overall Retail Capacity, Supply Commercial Banks Micro- Finance NGOs Regulated MFIs Coopera-tives, Credit Unions, Savings Grass Roots Groups Others Product Offerings Savings Microloans Working Capital Insurance Remittances, savings, assets Impact in Poor Households Income Assets Education, Health Women s Decisionmaking, Power Community Participation

Conclusion Much can be done in the capital markets to service better the needs of SMEs, but reforms cannot be done by regulators alone Policy-makers need a holistic approach and focused policy towards SMEs. Regulators can help by simplifying rules and regulation applicable to SMEs and allowing market forces and discipline to foster SME growth and innovation. IOSCO can help push IASB, OECD and other standard setters to expedite work to help SMEs.

THANK YOU