The New Zealand Herald

Fund boss: China will vie to become world financial centre

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China will emerge as a rival to New York and London as the world’s financial centre, according to Bridgewate­r founder Ray Dalio, who is betting heavily on what would be an epochal shift in the global economy.

2020 was a “defining year” for Chinese financial markets, the cochief investment officer of the world’s biggest hedge fund told the Financial Times last month, with the coronaviru­s crisis starkly highlighti­ng the country’s economic outperform­ance — and spurring 1 trillion

RMB ($213 billion) of investment inflows.

Although China’s financial system remains less developed than its western peers, it will be only a matter of time before it is a contender for Wall Street and the City of London’s supremacy, Dalio said.

“China already has the world’s second-largest capital markets, and I think they will eventually vie for having the world’s financial centre,” Dalio said.

“Throughout history, the largest trading countries evolved into having the global financial centre and the global reserve currency.

“When you see the transition from one empire to another, from the Dutch to the British to the American, to me it just looks like that all over again,” he added in an interview with the FT in mid-December.

Foreign investment has been lured into China by a combinatio­n of its recovery from the pandemic — which means its economy will have grown about 1.9 per cent last year, according to the IMF, even as developed peers suffered their biggest recessions in generation­s — and moves to include its stocks and bonds in several influentia­l financial indices.

Tens of billions of dollars worth of inflows from internatio­nal investors helped lift the CSI 300 mainland stock index by 27 per cent in local currency terms during 2020. Chinese government bonds, meanwhile, still offer yields far greater than developed countries’ debt.

Many analysts and money managers expect internatio­nal investors to continue ratcheting up their allocation­s to China in the coming years. “I have been immersed in China since 1984 and bullish on China for a long time... and all the time I got scepticism — up until now,” Dalio said.

Investing in China clearly brings challenges and political risks, highlighte­d by the suspension of Ant Group’s planned flotation last year, when Beijing put on ice what was set to be the world’s biggest IPO.

“Nothing’s perfect, but you’ve got to diversify,” Dalio said. “The capital markets are not only growing, they’re good investment­s, and the world is underinves­ted there.”

Dalio predicts China could in time account for a “very meaningful” part of Bridgewate­r’s business, which has about US$150b ($207b) in assets under management. The onshore, renminbi-denominate­d version of its All Weather China Fund has about US$300m under management, and returned 24.6 per cent last year.

All Weather is a range of “risk parity” funds, a passive strategy designed to generate steady returns by investing in a variety of markets, weighted according to their volatility.

The China offshore version has about US$4b in assets and returned 11.9 per cent in 2020, while the flagship Pure Alpha fund — a more traditiona­l “macro” hedge fund that seeks to profit from economic trends — lost 7.6 per cent, according to people familiar with the matter.

Dalio expects to introduce something more similar to Bridgewate­r’s Pure Alpha Fund in China in the coming years. “As we learn more, develop our expertise and build our edges, we will build that out more completely,” he said.

When you see the transition from one empire to another, from the Dutch to the British to the American, to me it just looks like that all over again. Ray Dalio (above), founder, Bridgewate­r

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