July 2017

To perform its statutory capital increase obligation, a state-owned financial holding company may obtain unsecured credit from its subsidiary bank on an exceptional basis(Taiwan)

2017.5.24
Grace Chiang

The Financial Supervisory Commission issued the Jin-Guan-Yin-Fa-10500284830 Circular of May 24, 2017 (hereinafter, the "Circular") to indicate that the "government" in the requirement that banks may provide unsecured credit to the government does not include state-owned enterprises. Effective immediately, however, if a state-owned financial holding company takes out a loan from its bank subsidiary to perform its statutory capital increase obligation under Article 56 of the Financial Holding Company Law, unsecured credit may be provided on an exceptional basis.

Article 32, Paragraph 1 of the Banking Law provides: "No unsecured credit shall be extended by a bank to enterprises in which the bank holds three percent (3%) or more of the total paid-in capital, to its responsible person, to its staff members, to its major shareholders, or to any interested party of its own responsible person or of a staff member in charge of credit extensions, provided that the foregoing prohibition on unsecured credit shall not apply to consumer loans and loans extended to the government." The Circular indicates that the "government" set forth in the proviso above does not include state-owned enterprises. However, a state-owned financial holding company which takes out a loan from its bank subsidiary to perform its capital increase obligation under Article 56 of the Financial Holding Company Law may be exempted from the restriction under such article.

本网站上所有资料内容(「内容」)均属理慈国际科技法律事务所所有。本所保留所有权利,除非获得本所事前许可外,均不得以任何形式或以任何方式重制、下载、散布、发行或移转本网站上之内容。

所有内容仅供作参考且非为特定议题或具体个案之法律或专业建议。所有内容未必为最新法律及法规之发展,本所及其编辑群不保证内容之正确性,并明示声明不须对任何人就信赖使用本网站上全部或部分之内容,而据此所为或经许可而为或略而未为之结果负担任何及全部之责任。撰稿作者之观点不代表本所之立场。如有任何建议或疑义,请与本所联系。

作者

Katty
Katty