In December 2019, the People’s Bank of China (“PBOC”) issued the draft Measures for the Protection of Financial Consumers’ Rights and Interests for public comment (“draft Financial Consumer Measures”) (an official Chinese version is available here).  Although the draft Financial Consumer Measures focus more broadly on consumer rights in the financial sectors, they imposes upon financial institutions privacy and cybersecurity obligations that—in certain instances—extend beyond the requirements stipulated in China’s Cybersecurity Law (“CSL”).

Following up on the draft Financial Consumer Measures, PBOC issued the Personal Financial Information Protection Technical Specification (“Financial Information Specification”) on February 13, 2020 setting forth additional privacy and cybersecurity requirements applicable to the life cycle of personal financial information collected and processed by regulated financial entities and other entities that process personal financial information (“Financial Industry Entities”). While the Financial Information Specification follows the general personal information protection principles under the Cybersecurity Law (“CSL”) framework, some specific requirements are worth highlighting, as explained below.

Definition and Classification of Personal Financial Information

“Personal financial information” is defined as information collected, processed, and stored by Financial Industry Entities from various sources, including through the provision of financial products or services.

Such information shall be classified as C3, C2, C1, in order of decreasing sensitivity, evaluated on the basis of the harm or damages suffered after unauthorized access.

Requirements for Collection and Processing of Personal Financial Information

 The Financial Information Specification sets forth requirements governing the lifecycle of personal financial information beginning from collection, with enhanced requirements governing the processing of data under C2 and C3 categories. Examples of key requirements include:

Cross-Border Transfer Requirements for Personal Financial Information

Privacy considerations further extent to cross-border transfers of personal financial information.  If business needs require the transfer of personal financial information to entities located outside of China (e.g., corporate headquarters, subsidiaries, etc.), the Financial Information Specification enumerates specific requirements governing such transfers, including (1) complying with Chinese laws and regulations, (2) obtaining the explicit consent of data subjects, and (3) ensuring that the foreign entity’s responsibilities, such as encryption and deletion of personal financial information, are in place via means including contractual agreements, on-site inspections, etc. These requirements are generally consistent with the draft Measures on Security Assessment of the Cross-border Transfer of Personal Information, but the Financial Information Specification has been finalized and is now in effect.

Photo of Yan Luo Yan Luo

Yan Luo advises clients on a broad range of regulatory matters in connection with data privacy and cybersecurity, antitrust and competition, as well as international trade laws in the United States, EU, and China.

Yan has significant experience assisting multinational companies navigating the…

Yan Luo advises clients on a broad range of regulatory matters in connection with data privacy and cybersecurity, antitrust and competition, as well as international trade laws in the United States, EU, and China.

Yan has significant experience assisting multinational companies navigating the rapidly-evolving Chinese cybersecurity and data privacy rules. Her work includes high-stakes compliance advice on strategic issues such as data localization and cross border data transfer, as well as data protection advice in the context of strategic transactions. She also advises leading Chinese technology companies on global data governance issues and on compliance matters in major jurisdictions such as the European Union and the United States.

Yan regularly contributes to the development of data privacy and cybersecurity rules and standards in China. She chairs Covington’s membership in two working groups of China’s National Information Security Standardization Technical Committee (“TC260”), and serves as an expert in China’s standard-setting group for Artificial Intelligence and Ethics.