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Chief talks tough on minibonds

2-MIN READ2-MIN
Joyce Man

The chief executive appears to be losing his patience with banks over their handling of minibonds linked to bankrupt US bank Lehman Brothers - insisting they respond swiftly to a government buy-back proposal and warning the administration may fund legal action by minibond investors.

'They cannot keep dragging on,' he said in a strongly worded message after delivering his policy address.

He said investors had waited for weeks and the Monetary Authority had found evidence of mis-selling by some banks.

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'Considering this situation, I am now requiring that banks reply this week,' he said.

Financial Secretary John Tsang Chun-wah announced the proposal on Monday last week, and said banks had a week to respond.

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His proposal is that banks which sold the minibonds buy them back at their current value.

Investors bought HK$12.7 billion of minibonds issued or guaranteed by Lehman Brothers. They face losing much or all of their investment. Many claim that banks and brokers mis-sold them as low-risk. In fact, minibonds are high-risk credit-linked derivatives.

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