Global Times

Investment in A-share market by foreigners

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China is moving closer to allowing certain foreign investors to set up accounts to directly invest in the country’s blue-chip Ashare market, according to the China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC) on Sunday.

If the move materializ­es, it would be a “great leap” in the country’s efforts to further open up its financial markets and lift cross-border investment restrictio­ns in the equity market, an expert noted.

The State Council, China’s cabinet, has approved a plan to allow two types of foreigners to set up accounts with the A-share market, and the plan has been published for a period of public comment, the CSRC said in a statement.

Under the plan, foreigners who are working in the Chinese mainland and those who are working overseas but for an A-share market listed company and participat­e in equity incentive programs would be allowed to set up accounts that would allow them to directly invest in the market.

“This is a huge step. It would be the first time that China allows individual foreigners to invest in the domestic stock market. It is a great leap in institutio­nal reform and financial opening,” Dong Dengxin, director of the Financial Securities Institute at the Wuhan University of Science and Technology, told the Global Times on Sunday.

Currently, individual foreign investors who are interested in investing in the Chinese mainland stock market have to participat­e in programs such as the ShanghaiHo­ng Kong and Shenzhen-Hong Kong Connect.

The new move “is of great significan­ce for further expanding the channel for capital into the stock market, optimizing market structure and improving the degree of openness and globalizat­ion of the capital market,” the CSRC statement said.

Apart from improving openness and globalizat­ion of the domestic financial market, the move is also aimed at attracting foreign talent to work in the Chinese mainland or for Chinese companies, Dong noted.

But allowing individual foreign investors to directly invest in the domestic stock market could pose more challenges for regulators than institutio­nal investors because “it is much harder to track individual­s than entities,” Dong said.

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