Statistics
China Continues Wealth Management Product Love Affair

Chinese households have poured more savings into wealth management products to a level of RMB12.7 trillion ($2.1 trillion), even though the Asian giant’s government has sought to curb this sector due to fears about possible blowups.
Chinese households have poured more savings into wealth
management products to a level of RMB12.7 trillion ($2.1
trillion), even though the Asian giant’s government has sought to
curb this sector due to fears about possible blowups, media
reports said.
The China Banking Wealth Management Registration System produced
data showing that the outstanding value of the sector rose by
almost a quarter in the first six months of this year, compared
with the previous six-month period, reports said.
Wealth management products, according to a report by
Bloomberg, are seen as less risky than trust products; I
the latter case, they are higher-yielding.
The ascent of a so-called “shadow banking” system has alarmed
investors and policymakers, encouraging curbs to prevent a repeat
of some of the problems associated with the credit crunch in the
West almost six years ago.
Wealth-management products usually insist on an investor placing
a minimum sum of only RMB50,000; trusts tend to be higher up the
wealth scale.
There was a 44 per cent gain in the value of the wealth products
in 2013, media reported the China Banking Regulatory Commission
as saying. Almost 70 per cent of the outstanding value of the
wealth funds was invested in bonds, the money market and bank
deposits as of the end of June.
Products issued by banks in the first half of the year offered an
average annualized return of 5.2 per cent to investors, the
report showed, higher than the upper limit of 3.3 per cent
interest rate banks can provide on their one-year deposits.
The CBWMRS report also said that 31 products due during the first
six months led to losses.