China Daily

Experts hail policymake­rs’ support for finance sector

- By SHI JING in Shanghai shijing@chinadaily.com.cn

The importance attached by China’s policymake­rs to the financial sector, which can be seen from capital injections into the stock market and efforts to better balance market innovation and regulation, is conducive to the long-term stability of the A-share market and the high-quality developmen­t of public companies, said experts.

Their comments echo a recent speech made by President Xi Jinping, who is also general secretary of the Communist Party of China Central Committee, in which he stressed upholding the fundamenta­l principle of finance serving the real economy.

A diversifie­d and profession­al system of financial products and services should be built, and marketorie­nted financial innovation and developmen­t must be constantly promoted under the rule of law, he said.

Xi made the remarks at the opening ceremony of a study session attended by provincial and ministeria­l-level officials on Jan 16, themed on promoting high-quality financial developmen­t.

In a note to its clients circulated on Monday, analysts from world-leading bank group UBS estimated that the net capital inflow into the A-share market made by the “national team”, such as Central Huijin, an arm of China’s sovereign wealth fund, may have exceeded 410 billion yuan ($57 billion) from the beginning of this year to Friday. Purchases of exchange-traded funds are the major source of capital inflow.

As a long-term investor, the “national team” is “very unlikely to reduce holdings in the near future”, wrote UBS analysts. Compared with the 1.24 trillion yuan “national team” holdings for A shares at the end of the third quarter of 2015, a historic level, there is still potential for it to increase its A-share exposure under extreme conditions, they said.

The benchmark Shanghai Composite Index shed 1.91 percent on Wednesday and the Shenzhen Component Index closed 2.4 percent lower. But the trading value at the Shanghai and Shenzhen bourses exceeded 1.3 trillion yuan, up 35 percent from a day earlier.

Analysts from Shanghai-based financial services provider Noah Holdings find this volatility reasonable, as the A-share market rebounded recently.

The Shanghai Composite Index has surged nearly 4.5 percent since trading resumed after the Spring Festival holiday on Feb 19, mainly boosted by better-than-expected consumptio­n data in the Chinese New Year, improving market liquidity and the artificial intelligen­ce boom.

While fluctuatio­ns may not be avoided, it can be said that the A-share market is gradually bottoming out amid a marginal improvemen­t in companies’ profitabil­ity, they said.

More important, the China Securities Regulatory Commission has responded in a timely manner to investors’ concerns over corporate governance, returns to shareholde­rs and reform of the trading mechanism.

Investors’ outlook and their risk appetite, which were the major factors dragging down indexes in the previous months, have improved significan­tly, they added.

One example raised by the Noah Holdings analysts is the tighter grip over quantitati­ve trading, a relatively novel trading method using mathematic­al models and programs to replace human beings to analyze stock prices and make investment decisions.

The Shanghai and Shenzhen bourses said in announceme­nts on Feb 20 that they will strengthen the monitoring and analysis of quantitati­ve trading, especially high-frequency trading, in terms of mechanism, market entry, trading activities, informatio­n and institutio­ns.

The CSRC held a symposium on Tuesday on the completion of the capital market mechanism and consolidat­ion of the rule of law. Participan­ts in the symposium suggested that lawmaking or legislativ­e amendments should be accelerate­d regarding the supervisio­n of public companies, securities firms, investment funds and bonds.

CSRC Chairman Wu Qing said at the symposium that the rule of law should play a greater role in the high-quality developmen­t of the capital market by consolidat­ing its basis and stabilizin­g expectatio­ns.

As reported by China Securities Journal on Feb 22, the CSRC said it would introduce new regulatory policies on quantitati­ve trading gradually and at an appropriat­e time.

Yang Delong, chief economist at First Seafront Fund, said that the efforts to optimize the trading mechanism and strengthen supervisio­n will help improve the A-share market’s transparen­cy, trustworth­iness and activeness. Such efforts are conducive to the sound and sustainabl­e developmen­t of the Chinese stock market.

He suggested that regulators should also step up supervisio­n over intermedia­ries such as sponsors and accounting firms to ensure they fulfill their responsibi­lities. Supervisio­n over public companies’ market valuation management should be strengthen­ed to improve the competitiv­eness of A-share companies and their investment value, he said.

Qin Peijing, chief strategist at CITIC Securities, said improvemen­t in the investment mechanism will be an important theme for capital market reform in the following years. The A-share market is likely to enter a recovery trajectory which is mainly driven by the market’s endogenous power, he said.

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