China's securities watchdog denies resignation offer from chairman
Updated: 2016-01-18 22:09
By Song Wei(chinadaily.com.cn)
|
|||||||||||
China's Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC) Monday refuted a Reuters' report that Xiao Gang, chairman of CSRC, has offered to resign, and the commission said it has asked Reuters to make a correction.
In a Reuters' report on Monday, the news service quoted unidentified sources as saying that the 57-year-old chairman tendered his resignation last week after his brainchild - a ‘circuit breaker' mechanism to limit stock market losses - was blamed for exacerbating a sharp sell-off.
Xiao delivered a lengthy speech at the authority's annual work meeting on Saturday in which he said the market rout since the summer had exposed many loopholes and deficiencies.
In his speech, the chairman vowed that the regulator would learn from its past mistakes.
The commission has come under growing criticism from investors for its handling of the stock market turmoil. China's A-share market plummeted at the start of the year after rebounding from a 34 percent loss in the summer. The benchmark index tumbled 18 percent in less than two weeks, closing in on the technical measure of a bear market (20 percent).
Related Stories
Securities watchdog comments on China's trading flaws 2016-01-16 14:21
Stocks tumble as trade data fail to boost sentiment 2016-01-13 16:00
China penalizes illegal stocks operations 2015-12-26 10:07
China changes 20 sample stocks of Hushen 300 index 2015-12-14 14:07
Stocks catch a chill as liquidity tightens 2015-12-09 09:43
'Shadow stocks' surge in anticipation of floats 2015-11-21 10:31
Today's Top News
Xi to deliver speech on Middle East policy
AIIB chief vows to run clean, lean, green institution
Chinese firms making inroads in UK
Value addition
IS claims Jakarta attack, targets Indonesia for 1st time
Chinese people most optimistic in global survey
COSCO offers 700m euros for Greece’s Piraeus Port
Istanbul bomber entered Turkey as refugee
Hot Topics
Lunar probe , China growth forecasts, Emission rules get tougher, China seen through 'colored lens', International board,
Editor's Picks
Chinese firms making inroads in UK |
Two-child policy to add 30m workers |
Shanghai Disneyland set for June opening |
Mountaineering school hits new heights |
EU stuck in the middle as China chases MES |
Food from the Forbidden City |