China Daily

Investing from China to benefit the world

Programs like QDLP, wealth products showcase merits of win-win approach

- By ZHOU LANXU zhoulanxv@chinadaily.com.cn Shi Jing contribute­d to this story.

A little recognized and probably unapprecia­ted fact about China’s remarkable reform and opening-up policy of the last 40-odd years, piloted ably by the Communist Party of China (CPC), is there is more to it than attracting foreign investment­s and technologi­es to stoke developmen­t in China, investors, economists and researcher­s said.

Reform and opening-up, including that in the financial services industry, are also about China growing in a spirit of win-win, to benefit the rest of the world as much as itself.

Perhaps no recent policy move illustrate­s this point more tellingly than the one that helped introduce pilots of the Qualified Domestic Limited Partner, or QDLP, program, market mavens said.

“Backed by our expertise in overseas alternativ­e investment­s, developing the QDLP business line has played a critical role in our journey of expanding presence in China,” said Patrick Liu, head of China operations at Neuberger Berman, a New York-headquarte­red global asset management company (AMC) that had $429 billion worth of assets under management as of March 31. Its fundraisin­g scale in alternativ­e investment­s ranked sixth globally over the past five years.

Through QDLP, the CPC-led China has found a way of infusing lifesustai­ning capital, gathered from Chinese people, particular­ly high net worth individual­s (HNWIs), into the world’s financial markets, thus helping shore up the incipient recovery of the global economy from the ill-effects of the COVID-19 pandemic, they said.

In a sense, that is not a magical overnight turnaround but a wellthough­t-out, imaginativ­e strategy — QDLP was introduced in Shanghai in 2013 — to funnel Chinese HNWIs’ rising disposable incomes into productive channels worldwide, even into some alternativ­e investment avenues like private equity and hedge funds.

Addressing the CPC and World Political Parties Summit via video link in Beijing on Tuesday, Xi Jinping, general secretary of the CPC Central Committee and Chinese president, said the CPC stands ready to strengthen communicat­ion with the world’s political parties to guide economic globalizat­ion to become more open, inclusive, mutually beneficial and balanced toward greater winwin results.

A shining example of that resolve, QDLP programs allow participat­ion of foreign asset managers as well as domestic ones in some pilots. The asset management companies raise money from mainland investors toward privately offered funds that invest overseas within an approved quota.

The QDLP programs have grown in popularity since 2013. A few local government­s such as those in Beijing, Tianjin and Qingdao, Shandong province, have embraced them with gusto.

Unlike other outbound investment schemes that mainly allow investment in listed securities and funds, the QDLP programs also provide access to overseas private equity and bonds as well as other types of alternativ­e investment­s like hedge funds and bad credit assets.

The access that foreign asset managers gain to HNWIs in China via QDLP provides a valuable opportunit­y for the former to test the waters in the Chinese market and consider business expansion in China, experts said.

For instance, since receiving its QDLP license in 2018, Neuberger Berman has successful­ly applied for new quotas three times. At the beginning of the year, it received the latest green signal to raise $100 million. About two-fifths of it has been invested already, suggesting the asset manager is sanguine about its prospects in China.

Through its two previous successful applicatio­ns, Neuberger Berman raised and invested $80 million via four QDLP products, which also helped it gather invaluable management experience in China-related investment strategy, compliance and risk control, and anti-money laundering.

Like Neuberger Berman, about 50 global AMCs have received QDLP licenses in Shanghai as of last year. These include prominent names such as BlackRock, Man Group and UBS, according to the Shanghai Municipal Financial Regulatory Bureau.

Although QDLP tends to attract HNWIs due to high investment thresholds, various other wealth management products of AMCs are seeking to meet the growing demand of newly affluent Chinese households for opportunit­ies to contribute to global prosperity via overseas investment­s, experts said.

“Public awareness of wealth management and demand for asset allocation have become increasing­ly stronger. Overseas markets have become a key investment destinatio­n for Chinese residents, especially entreprene­urs and HNWIs,” said Austin Luo, head of private wealth management at Haitong Internatio­nal Securities Group Ltd.

“In a global market landscape featuring intensifie­d volatility, alternativ­e strategies that invest in mature overseas markets can provide domestic investors with more diversifie­d investment options, helping them diversify risks and reduce volatility,” UBS Asset Management, one of the world’s largest alternativ­e investment managers, said in an emailed interview.

The company said it will introduce its second hedge fund under the QDLP program in the second half of the year, which will raise funds in China and invest in overseas markets.

This move came after the Swiss asset management giant’s first overseas hedge fund under the QDLP program found favor among domestic HNWIs since its launch in 2016.

In 2015, the company received the QDLP license with a quota of $100 million via its wholly owned venture in Shanghai.

UBS Asset Management said it will further leverage the QDLP program to offer Chinese investors more distinctiv­e investment products, including sustainabi­lity-focused funds, overseas alternativ­e funds and hedge funds.

Experts said China’s expedited steps in financial opening-up may further fuel the trend of AMCs launching more QDLP products.

Pan Gongsheng, deputy governor of the People’s Bank of China, the central bank, said at the 13th Lujiazui Forum in June that the country will expand the QDLP pilot programs, supporting Shanghai’s bid to emerge a major market in the world for wealth and asset management.

Measures will be taken to advance reform of cross-border investment­s by private equity funds to support their cross-border industrial investment, said Pan, who is also head of the State Administra­tion of Foreign Exchange, the country’s foreign exchange regulator.

Some progress in this direction has been made already. The SAFE approved the rollout of new QDLP pilot programs in Jiangsu and Guangdong provinces with quotas of $5 billion each this year. In November, it announced the rollout of QDLP in the Hainan Free Trade Port and Chongqing municipali­ty.

Since late last year, the administra­tion also doubled the QDLP quota to $10 billion for each of the QDLP programs in Shanghai and Beijing, as well as a similar outbound investment pilot program in Shenzhen, Guangdong province, called the Qualified Domestic Investment Enterprise, or QDIE, program.

The SAFE has so far approved at least $43 billion QDLP quotas nationwide, plus $10 billion toward quotas for Shenzhen’s QDIE, according to data compiled by DeHeng Law Offices.

Last year, removal of foreign ownership caps in financial sectors of securities, mutual funds, futures and life insurance encouraged foreign players to expand their business in China.

In June alone, BlackRock Fund Management Co Ltd, the first wholly foreign owned mutual fund business in China, as well as Japanbased Daiwa Securities Group and Singapore-based DBS Group’s majority-owned securities firms in China have all received licenses to commence business.

Financial opening-up will deepen in the years to come, as shown by the 14th Five-Year Plan (2021-25), the country’s developmen­t blueprint for the next five years.

China will steadily and properly advance the opening up of banking, securities, insurance, fund, futures and other financial sectors, deepen the connectivi­ty of domestic and overseas capital markets, and improve the system of qualified foreign investors, according to the plan.

The continuous efforts to open China’s financial border wider have demonstrat­ed how China is seeking to connect closer with the rest of the world for mutual interest under the dual-circulatio­n developmen­t paradigm, in which domestic circulatio­n is the mainstay and domestic and foreign markets support each other, experts said.

In the sector of alternativ­e investment, for instance, the expansion in QDLP programs will bring business opportunit­ies to foreign institutio­ns, diversify investment targets for domestic investors, and help promote high-quality developmen­t of China’s investment industry, they said.

UBS Asset Management summed it up nicely: “The QDLP programs have ushered investment strategies popular across mature overseas markets into China. These include alternativ­e strategies and ESGthemed investment­s, which take environmen­tal, social and governance standards as key criteria when screening potential investment­s.

“This process has helped enrich the product set in China’s asset management industry, set examples for domestic industry players, and promote the internatio­nalization of the country’s capital market.”

 ?? MA XUEJING / CHINA DAILY ??
MA XUEJING / CHINA DAILY

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