After belated securities reform, Hong Kong should
look at insurance regulation
Twenty-five years after it was proposed, the Hong Kong stock exchange is finally going
to implement a key reform that will bring it in line with late-20th century practice.
In a...
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After belated securities reform, Hong Kong should
look at insurance regulation
Twenty-five years after it was proposed, the Hong Kong stock exchange is finally going
to implement a key reform that will bring it in line with late-20th century practice.
In a city known for its efficiency, that is amazingly tardy. But better late than never.
After many rounds of consultation, the government will seek in the second quarter
lawmakers’ approval to change the law to allow investors to hold their shareholdings in
the form of electronic records instead of paper certificates.
Thus will the final major proposal in the Ian Hay Davison report in 1988 be adopted.
The report, which followed the 1987 market crash, was the blueprint for Hong Kong’s
regulatory system today. It led to the setting up of the Securities and Futures
Commission in 1989 and the introduction of a consolidated securities law – the
Securities and Futures Ordinance – in 2003.
With the imminent implementation of the report’s final
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