Compliance
Compliance Corner: Singapore, Hong Kong

A regular round-up of compliance news, such as fines, permissions, new technology solutions to make tracking risks easier, and other developments.
Singapore
Three prominent financial groups in Singapore have launched a
checklist to guide listed and unlisted business entities on how
to carry out general meetings when heightened safe distancing
measures are in place to fight the COVID-19 pandemic.
The checklist has been rolled out by the Monetary
Authority of Singapore, the
Accounting and Corporate Regulatory Authority and the
Singapore
Exchange Regulation.
The guidance is aimed at companies, variable capital companies,
business trusts, unit trusts and debenture holders.
If issuers need certain essential persons to be in the same
physical location to facilitate the conduct of a “virtual”
meeting, the Ministry for Trade and Industry would grant an
automatic time-limited exemption to permit temporary operations
at the same physical location, provided that there are not more
than six people present and they are complying with safe
distancing measures.
Issuers whose annual general meetings are due to be held between
16 April and 31 July 2020 may alternatively choose to defer the
meetings by up to 60 days, as previously announced.
Hong Kong’s SFC
The Securities
and Futures Commission has found that the vast majority of
leveraged foreign exchange trading clients it tracked in 2018
were retail investors, raising questions about whether they
should be involved in this area.
The survey found that 98 per cent of active LFET clients were
retail investors and more than 99 per cent of turnover in the
LFET market was attributable to rolling spot forex contracts.
Turnover was relatively low for more complex forex products such
as options and forward contracts, which may be difficult for
retail investors to understand.
All LFET products were traded on an over-the-counter basis, the
SFC said in a statement last week.
As part of the SFC’s survey, a sample of brokers were selected to
provide more detailed information. These brokers reported that
more than 60 per cent of their LFET clients made net trading
losses in LFET, and some investors suffered losses of over HK$1
million.
"Leveraged foreign exchange trading may not be suitable for
everyone. It is done on a margin basis and these products may
involve complex or non-standard features. Even experienced
investors may suffer huge losses in such trading, especially in
times of high market volatility," Ashley Alder, the SFC’s chief
executive, said. "Brokers should ensure that their clients fully
understand the nature and risks of these products and have
sufficient financial resources to assume the risks and bear the
potential losses."
The survey data covered the 32 firms licensed for Type 3
regulated activity (leveraged foreign exchange trading) which
reported on their LFET activities in 2018. The sample contributed
77 per cent of market turnover and their clients accounted for 41
per cent of total active LFET clients.