Li Keqiang's India Visit

  • Most Popular
  • Most Shared

REUTERS SHOWCASE

Rate Cut Hopes

Rate Cut Hopes

BarCap expects bigger rate cuts in India in 2013.  Full Article 

Rupee Low

Rupee Low

Rupee hits 2013 low on importer demand, weak euro  Full Article | Related Story 

Tax Cloud

Tax Cloud

Apple CEO makes no apology for company's tax strategy.  Full Article 

Xbox One

Xbox One

Microsoft unveils Xbox One with Spielberg, Activision tie-up.  Full Article 

Vodafone Results

Vodafone Results

Vodafone keeps Verizon payout to make up for European slump  Full Article 

Murthy Fired

Murthy Fired

iGate sacks Murthy over undisclosed relationship.  Full Article 

Tumblr Bought

Tumblr Bought

Yahoo's rise in Asia offsets risk from Tumblr bet  Full Article 

Bond Business

Bond Business

RBI says foreign investors may buy inflation-linked bonds  Full Article | Related Story 

Buy, Sell or Hold?

Buy, Sell or Hold?

Confused while buying stocks? Get buy, sell or hold recommendations from VantageTrade.  Full Coverage 

Reuters India Mobile

Reuters India Mobile

Get the latest news on the go. Visit Reuters India on your mobile device.  Full Coverage 

China warns banks on OTC hedge defaults -report

Stocks

   
Visitors look at a display of flowers during media day at the Chelsea Flower Show in London May 20, 2013. REUTERS/Stefan Wermuth

Chelsea Flower Show

The Queen, Prince Harry as well as garden gnomes turn up at the 100th annual Chelsea Flower Show.  Slideshow 

BEIJING | Sat Aug 29, 2009 9:47am IST

BEIJING Aug 29 (Reuters) - Chinese state-owned enterprises (SOEs) may unilaterally terminate derivative contracts with six foreign banks that provide over-the-counter commodity hedging services, a leading financial magazine said.

China's SOE regulator, the State-owned Assets Supervision and Administration Commission (SASAC), had told the financial institutions that SOEs reserved the right to default on contracts, Caijing magazine quoted an unnamed industry source as saying.

It did not name the banks or the firms in question, but said Keith Noyes, an official with the International Swaps and Derivatives Association, had confirmed he was aware of the letter to the banks. He declined to comment further to Caijing.

It also cited a SASAC official as saying that almost every SOE involved in foreign exchange or trade had some exposure to derivatives such as crude oil, non-ferrous metals, agricultural commodities, iron ore and coal, although only 31 SOEs were licensed to do so.

Nobody at SASAC was immediately available to comment on Saturday.

SASAC took over the job of overseeing SOEs' derivatives trading from the securities regulator in February after several Chinese firms reported huge losses from derivatives, and quickly tightened the rules, ordering firms to quit risky contracts and report their positions on a quarterly basis.

In January, Air China (601111.SS) (0753.HK), Shanghai Airlines 600591.SS and China Eastern (600115.SS) reported book losses of almost $2 billion on aviation fuel hedging contracts, the official Xinhua news agency said at the time.

For more details on China's derivatives regulation, please click on: [ID:nPEK207347]

For a history of China's derivative debacles: [ID:nPEK206094]

(Editing by Sanjeev Miglani)

Comments (0)
This discussion is now closed. We welcome comments on our articles for a limited period after their publication.