Hong Kong seeks swift downgrades and provisioning to ensure adequately regulated banks and secure market confidence: panel
- Hong Kong is in the process of relaunching itself after Covid pandemic measures were dropped in March, but is faced with geopolitical and interest rate challenges
- Authorities are pushing for ‘swift downgrades and swift provisioning’ to ensure the banking sector is adequately regulated to ensure market confidence
Hong Kong is in the process of reinventing itself with authorities pushing for “swift downgrades and swift provisioning” to ensure the banking sector is adequately regulated to ensure market confidence, a panel discussion during the annual conference of the Hong Kong Institute of Bankers (HKIB) concluded.
“It’s actually surprising that we only removed all the restrictions on the first of March this year, and so only six months in, it seems like millennia away now,” he said while talking of the city’s “relaunch” campaign.
While the events “did not affect [Hong Kong] directly, it doesn’t mean that we shouldn’t learn from it,” Yuen added.
The HKMA will continue to push for “swift downgrades and swift provisioning” to ensure the banking sector is adequately regulated, said Yuen.