Source - http://www.cnbc.com/
By - Clement Tan
Category - Port Of Miami Hotels
Posted By - Inn and Suites In West Miami
By - Clement Tan
Category - Port Of Miami Hotels
Posted By - Inn and Suites In West Miami
Port Of Miami Hotels |
China's surprise move to expand the size and reach of investment
quotas represents the boldest reform yet this year in allowing foreign
investors more access to its financial markets.
The measures
unveiled by the top securities regulator on Friday are the latest in a
series of steps Beijing has taken in recent months to fire up flagging
investor interest, allowing foreign firms to move funds more freely into
China and expanding another pilot programme to London, Singapore and
elsewhere.
The China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC)
almost doubled the quota of the Qualified Foreign Institutional Investor
(QFII) scheme to $150 billion. The plan, introduced in 2002, allows
investors to bring foreign currency into China to buy domestic stocks,
bonds and money market instruments.
"It was a banner announcement,
a signal of intent by the new CSRC chief Xiao Gang that Beijing remains
committed to opening up its markets," said Chris Powers, an analyst at
Shanghai-based financial consultancy Z-Ben Advisors.
But the
timing of the move was surprising, as it comes at a time when appetite
for Chinese shares is at its weakest in years thanks to a slowing
economy, causing once-popular funds earmarked under such investment
schemes to suffer heavy outflows.
Existing quotas are already underutilised.
Before the latest expansion plan, only $43 billion of the current $80 billion quota had been used so far.
Its
yuan counterpart, the Renminbi Qualified Foreign Institutional Investor
(RQFII) has fared no better, with less than half of the 270 billion
yuan ($44 billion) quota taken up so far.
RQFII allows investors
to buy Chinese stocks and bonds using offshore yuan. It is currently
available only through designated institutions in Hong Kong, but will be
expanded to London, Singapore, Taiwan and other unidentified locations.
Nevertheless,
bankers say these steps signal authorities are focused in expanding the
yuan's global clout by allowing more foreign companies and banks to use
the currency in both international trade and to buy Chinese assets.
Currently, about 12 percent of China's trade is denominated in its own
currency.
Timing-wise, China has followed a familiar script in the
four-year history of its yuan internationalisation theme, always
undertaking fresh reforms when it sensed investor interest was waning.
"After
a long time, we are starting to see a lot of excitement from our
clients and we are getting queries on what they can do under these
quotas and the other reforms," said the head of yuan trade settlement at
a U.S. bank in Hong Kong.
DEBT OVER EQUITIES
Despite the buzz around the quotas, fund managers do not expect a deluge of inflows to hit China's markets soon.
The
China Enterprises Index of the top Chinese listings in Hong Kong and
the CSI300, an index of the leading Shanghai and Shenzhen A-share, are
down by 16 and 8 percent, respectively, since the start of the year.
Both are popular benchmarks for exchange traded funds (ETFs) under the two quota schemes.
Hong
Kong-listed ETFs tracking mainland equity indexes have suffered net
outflows since mid-January amounting to $4.9 billion, according to
Thomson Reuters Lipper data.
For example, E-Fund's ETF, one of the
oldest ETFs under the RQFII scheme, has lost 70 percent of the units
outstanding so far this year due to investor redemptions.
"China's
economy is losing some growth momentum and investors are not optimistic
about the outlook for its stock market," said a fund manager with a
Chinese asset management firm who has an RQFII quota.
But that may
change in the longer term. Investment bank CICC says the expansion of
the QFII scheme brings China's A-shares a step closer towards inclusion
in the global MSCI emerging markets index, potentially signaling
billions of dollars of inflows from benchmark funds.
Bonds may
hold more promise for now. At nearly 5 trillion yuan, the mainland bond
market is 40 times the size of the offshore yuan bond market, according
to HSBC. It offers more variety to investors, though demand may be
limited more to sovereign issues than often illiquid corporate bonds for
now. ($1 = 6.1350 Chinese yuan)
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