Global Times

HK launches MSCI futures

▶ US financial sanctions won’t crush city: experts

- By Xie Jun

Hong Kong Exchanges and Clearing (HKEX) on Monday launched a suite of futures contracts based on Asia and emerging market benchmarks compiled by global index provider MSCI in an effort to press forward its internatio­nalization strategy.

Experts said that Hong Kong should prepare for possible financial sanctions from the US government, though they believe that the US has no way to steer Hong Kong’s capital markets given the latter’s internatio­nalization level.

According to the HKEX, the 10 futures contracts launched Monday are part of HKEX’s new index licensing agreement with MSCI Inc announced in late May. In total, Hong Kong will introduce 37 futures and options contracts in tranches, benchmarke­d against MSCI indices.

The second tranche of contracts will be rolled out on July 20, and some later contracts will be denominate­d in global currencies other than the greenback, such as the yen and the Singapore dollar.

After the introducti­on of these derivative contracts, the HKEX will have the broadest suite of MSCI derivative­s products based in the Asian time zone, according to a statement published on the official HKEX website.

The inclusion also marks further expansion of HKEX’s derivative­s market, which some experts said is as internatio­nalized as the US market.

“It will consolidat­e Hong Kong’s role as an internatio­nal financial hub by attracting more capital, particular­ly from emerging market investors, to converge in Hong Kong,” said Xi Junyang, a professor at the Shanghai University of Finance and Economics.

Hong Kong is also mounting efforts to enhance its internatio­nalization level at a time when the US is backing sanctions over the security law, some of which might pose a threat to Hong Kong financial markets in the future, experts said.

According to Xi, it is possible that the US will roll out measures against Hong Kong’s financial markets, such as restrictin­g US companies’ financial interactio­ns with Hong Kong.

Dong Dengxin, director of the Finance and Securities Institute at the Wuhan University of Science and Technology, said that the US might attempt to attack the Hong Kong dollar in a similar way to George Soros during the Asian financial crisis.

Despite those possible attacks, experts are confident that Hong Kong’s financial market will not be severely undermined.

On one hand, global investors are dispersed on the Hong Kong capital markets. On the other hand, Chinese mainland capital is backing the Hong Kong market.

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