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SHANGHAI (Reuters) – China has appointed banking veteran Yi Huiman to head the China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC), putting governance of the nation’s stock markets in his hands at a time when investor confidence has been hit by a slowing economy and U.S. tariffs.

FILE PHOTO: Industrial and Commercial Bank of China Ltd (ICBC)’s president Yi Huiman poses to photographers as he arrives at a news conference about its annual result announcement at its headquarters in Beijing, China, March 30, 2016. REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon

Yi, 54, currently chairman of the Industrial and Commercial Bank of China (ICBC) (601398.SS) (1398.HK), will take over from Liu Shiyu as the CSRC’s party secretary and chairman, state news agency Xinhua reported on Saturday.

Yi is an ICBC stalwart and has been working at the state bank for more than three decades. He originally joined ICBC as a junior loan officer at a branch in Zhejiang province in 1985.

He was promoted to president of ICBC in 2013, overseeing the bank’s overall operations. Three years later, at the age of 51, he succeeded retiring chairman Jiang Jianqing to take the helm of the world’s largest lender by assets.

He’s “pragmatic and knows how to run giant ICBC,” said a Beijing-based ICBC banker who works under Yi and is familiar with his management style. He declined to be named as he is not permitted by his employer to speak to the media.

Yi, however, does not have a background in regulatory work, other sources said. Prior to joining ICBC, he spent a year working at the Hangzhou city bureau of the Chinese central bank.

BIG CHALLENGES

Yi faces the challenge of reviving global and domestic investor interest in Chinese equities, which have lost a quarter of their value from a year ago amid slowing economic growth and friction between Beijing and Washington over trade issues.

Trust in the CSRC has also been hit following a spate of violations in which companies had paid officials to gain regulatory approvals.

In the short term, Yi will have to handle the imminent launch of a planned Nasdaq-style technology board in Shanghai, while the integration of China’s capital markets into the global system will also likely be at the top of his agenda.

Two projects aimed at internationalizing China’s stock market, including the Shanghai-London stock connect, were delayed last year. Foreign investors still only account for 3 percent of the country’s total market capitalization.

Liu, who served in CSRC’s top post for three years, has been given another appointment, Xinhua reported.

The state-run Securities Times newspaper reported on Saturday that Liu would become the deputy party chief of the All China Federation of Supply and Marketing Cooperatives, a ministerial-level government body under the State Council.

Reporting by Brenda Goh and Samuel Shen in SHANGHAI, Julie Zhu in HONG KONG and Shu Zhang in SINGAPORE; Editing by Tom Hogue

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