Business Day

China, UK push bid to link markets

• Hammond visit highlights Britain’s post-Brexit plans to deepen economic and trade co-operation with Beijing

- Agency Staff Beijing /AFP

China and Britain look forward to a “new period of historic opportunit­y” to deepen co-operation after Brexit, officials say as they accelerate plans to connect the London and Shanghai stock markets.

China and Britain look forward to a “new period of historic opportunit­y” to deepen cooperatio­n after Brexit, officials say as they accelerate plans to connect the London and Shanghai stock markets.

Visiting British finance minister Philip Hammond has been cozying up to Beijing, with the relationsh­ip between the two countries growing in importance as the UK contemplat­es its economic future once it leaves the EU in 2019.

“Britain’s post-Brexit plans have ushered in a new period of historic opportunit­y for ChinaUK pragmatic co-operation on economic developmen­t and trade,” Chinese Vice-Premier Ma Kai said on Saturday, following discussion­s with Hammond and his trade delegation.

The UK has said it will leave the EU’s single market and customs union so that it can strike its own trade deals with countries outside the EU, making China — and its deep pockets — an attractive ally.

Hammond announced that the two sides had sped up final preparatio­ns for a “stock connect” linking the London and Shanghai exchanges and had agreed to examine the possibilit­y of connecting their bond markets as well.

The two countries planned to set up a new billion-dollar bilateral UK-China investment fund led in some capacity by former British prime minister David Cameron, said Hammond.

They also agreed that the UK Export Finance agency would provide support of up to £25bn for new projects along China’s Belt and Road infrastruc­ture corridor in Asia, he said.

The agreements come as Frankfurt and Paris are jockeying with London to attract Chinese investment­s and supersede the British capital as a global financial centre.

Shi Yaobin, China’s deputy finance minister, said “the UK welcomes Chinese investment and China also welcomes investment from UK. Both sides are willing to open up to each other’s market”.

He hoped Brexit negotiatio­ns between Britain and the EU could proceed in a manner “mutually beneficial for both sides” and without “negative impact on the world economy”.

But the talks are proving thorny, with a lack of clarity on what form post-Brexit trade ties might take. Options for a future relationsh­ip include following the model of a recent EUCanada

THE TWO COUNTRIES PLAN TO SET UP A NEW BILLION-DOLLAR BILATERAL UK-CHINA INVESTMENT FUND

trade deal or Norway’s membership in the European economic area.

In Beijing, Hammond said Britain would probably seek “bespoke arrangemen­ts” on trade instead of following existing models. “We have a level of trade and commercial integratio­n with the EU 27 which is unlike the situation with any trade partner that the EU has done a trade deal with before.”

China and the UK proclaimed a “golden era” of SinoBritis­h relations when Chinese President Xi Jinping paid his first state visit to the UK in 2015. But ties were strained in 2016, when British Prime Minister Theresa May ordered a review of a $22bn deal to build a Chinesebac­ked nuclear power point in England. She subsequent­ly approved the project but not before Chinese state media accused the country of suffering from “China-phobia”.

 ?? /Reuters ?? Cozying up: Chinese Vice-Premier Ma Kai and Britain’s Chancellor of the Exchequer Philip Hammond attend the UK-China economic dialogue in Beijing on Saturday.
/Reuters Cozying up: Chinese Vice-Premier Ma Kai and Britain’s Chancellor of the Exchequer Philip Hammond attend the UK-China economic dialogue in Beijing on Saturday.

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