The Star Malaysia

US asset manager closes down Shanghai office

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“Matthews can confirm it made the decision to close its Shanghai office and consolidat­e its research capabiliti­es within the existing Hong Kong office. But it would stay strongly committed to in-depth fundamenta­l research in China.” Matthews Internatio­nal Capital Management

HONG kong: US asset manager Matthews Internatio­nal Capital Management is closing its Shanghai office, a company statement and a source with direct knowledge says, the latest withdrawal of a foreign money manager amid difficult market conditions.

Other major global financial institutio­ns, such as Morgan Stanley, have trimmed their teams, as the blue-chip CSI300 index sank last month to five-year lows, pummelled by a property-debt crisis and lack of major stimulus.

“Matthews can confirm it made the decision to close its Shanghai office and consolidat­e its research capabiliti­es within the existing Hong Kong office,” the San Francisco-based firm said last Friday.

But it would stay strongly committed to in-depth fundamenta­l research in China, it added in the statement, while continuing to deliver high-quality client service in Asia.

A source familiar with the matter said the decision was a cost-cutting measure and the firm had fewer than 10 people, mainly market researcher­s, in the Shanghai office.

The source sought anonymity as he was not authorised to speak to media.

Matthews’ flagship China Fund has lost 22.4% over the past year through Feb 29, underperfo­rming a retreat of 14% by the MSCI China Index, data on its website shows. Bloomberg first reported the move by Matthews last Friday.

The pull-out joins a roster of exits over the past few years in the face of challenges such as a depressed domestic capital market, policy uncertaint­y and geopolitic­al tension.

Last October, US mutual fund giant Vanguard Group sold its stake of 49% in a joint venture with Chinese fintech giant Ant Group, after six years in the country.

A few months earlier, smaller American money manager Van Eck terminated a plan to set up a Chinese mutual fund unit because of uncertaint­ies. —

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