Shanghai, Dec 23 : China's foreign exchange regulator has
removed the $1 billion limit for foreign sovereign wealth funds, central banks
and monetary authorities buying Chinese assets through the Qualified
Institutional Investor Programme (QFII).
The new regulations, published
on the website of the State Administration of Foreign Exchange (SAFE), did not
specify a new top limit, merely that the funds can apply to invest over $1
billion.
The policy is aimed at sovereign wealth funds like Qatar
Holdings and the Hong Kong Monetary Authority, both of which have already been
approved to invest up to $1 billion each through QFII.
SAFE will retain
the right to approve or deny individual applications on a case-by-base
basis.
Chinese regulators have said in the past that facilitating
increased foreign investment in Chinese assets will help restore confidence in
China's stock markets, which have declined by over 60 percent since November
2007.
But the total amount of foreign money allowed to enter the domestic
stock market remains small, and the new rules do not increase
it.
Combined foreign investment in China's stock market accounts for only
1 percent of total market capitalization.
The overall net quota for the
QFII programme remains at its current $80 billion, of which SAFE has only
allocated $36 billion for use by QFII funds as of November 30.
Foreign
appetite for Chinese equities has shown some signs of increase in recent months,
especially in Hong Kong, but the weak performance of stock-focused QFII funds -
and complaints about high fee structures - has dampened appetite. (GRAPHIC:
Comparison of QFII fund performances in China.
To drum up additional
interest, Chinese regulators, including officials from the Shanghai and Shenzhen
stock exchanges, went on an overseas tour in September to advocate for Chinese
equities and QFII in particular.
The new regulations also relax
restrictions on the ability of funds to remit principal and income from
investments, but made no further clarifications as to how China will tax QFII
profits, an area of enduring uncertainty for QFII investors.
Chinese
stock markets had their biggest single-day jump since 2009, which some analysts
attributed to expectations of further relaxation of rules on foreign investment
in stocks.
Others, however, offered alternative explanations for the
unusual jump, such as behind-the-scenes share buybacks by state-owned entities
trying to engineer a rebound for the end of the
year.
Ends
SA/EN
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» China lets foreign sovereigns, central banks exceed $1 billion investment limit
China lets foreign sovereigns, central banks exceed $1 billion investment limit
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