China’s financial market opening-up continues apace

An employee works in a workshop of an intelligent cable industrial park in Changji Hui autonomous prefecture, northwest China’s Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region. (Photo by He Long/People’s Daily Online)

BEIJING: China has allowed Mastercard’s Chinese joint venture to conduct bank card clearing operations in the country, marking another step forward in the opening-up of the country’s financial market.
The approval made Mastercard the second overseas bank card clearing institution to enter the Chinese market, following American Express in 2020.
“China is one of our most important markets. We are pleased to have reached this milestone with our local partner, NetsUnion Clearing Corporation (NUCC),” said Michael Miebach, CEO of Mastercard, adding that Mastercard’s deeper participation in the Chinese market will benefit the country, its consumers and its businesses.
Mastercard NUCC Information Technology (Beijing) Co., Ltd, the joint venture of Mastercard and NUCC, can authorize its member institutions to issue Mastercard yuan bank cards in China, the People’s Bank of China (PBOC) announced.
Within six months of receiving its certification, the Mastercard joint venture will be able to authorize its member institutions in China to conduct the issuance and acceptance of Mastercard cards.
Calling it a landmark event in China’s latest financial market opening-up campaign, Dong Ximiao, chief researcher at Merchants Union Consumer Finance Company Limited, said that the broader opening-up of the country’s bank card clearing market will help domestic players improve services and elevate their risk prevention and control capabilities.
The move demonstrates China’s confidence and resolution to expand its opening-up, said Zeng Gang, director of the Shanghai Institution for Finance and Development. Allowing more overseas bank card clearing institutions to enter the Chinese market will help build a stable bank card clearing market structure with effective competition, and deepen the supply-side structural reform of the payment industry, Zeng said.
China has been stepping up efforts to promote a high level of financial opening-up, implementing concrete measures such as allowing global investors to invest in China’s capital market through more channels, and scrapping securities, futures and fund ownership caps for foreign institutions. –Agencies