China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Stock connect to start in November

- Zhang Yu contribute­d to this story. By CAI XIAO caixiao@chinadaily.com.cn

The long-awaited Shenzhen-Hong Kong Stock Connect is expected to start in mid- to late November, a move that makes it more likely that domestic stocks will be included in MSCI Inc’s main benchmarks, according to China’s securities regulator.

Technical preparatio­ns for the stock connect will take place from August to November, with the program scheduled to begin in mid- to late November, said Qi Bin, director of the internatio­nal cooperatio­n department at the China Securities Regulatory Commission.

The Shenzhen-Hong Kong Stock Connect, which allows mainland investors to buy Hong Kong stocks and vice versa, had been expected for more than a year following a similar program between Shanghai and Hong Kong in 2014.

On Aug 16, the State Council approved the plan to connect a second mainland stock exchange with Hong Kong’s.

“We have made a lot of effort to further open Chinese capital markets, and the Shenzhen- Hong Kong Stock Connect can play a positive role in helping domestic stocks be included in MSCI Inc’s main benchmarks,” said Qi.

The global share index compiler MSCI Inc in June rejected including Chinese mainland-listed A shares in its prominent emerging markets index. MSCI said that it would retain the option to include the A shares as part of its next market classifica­tion reviewin 2017.

According to Qi, China’s A sharemarke­t is the world’s second-largest market. It is also the largest emerging capital market and the fastest-growing one, so a global index without A shares is incomplete.

“The inclusion of yuan-denominate­d A shares in an MSCI Inc index is a historical certainty that will eventually happen,” said Qi.

A feasibilit­y study into a third stock connect, between the Shanghai and London exchanges is currently under way and maintains smooth progress, Qi added.

“The Shenzhen-Hong Kong Stock Connect should move China further along the road to MSCI inclusion and we see it as a significan­t catalyst for Chinese markets, particular­ly at a time when fundamenta­l strength and industrial profitabil­ity are building,” said Douglas Morton, head of research at Northern Trust Capital Markets Asia.

China’s securities regulator released a draft on Aug 26 expansion of an initiative that further opens the A-share stock market to investors. The draft revises the regulation­s for the Shanghai-Hong Kong Stock Connect, expanding their range to include the Shenzhen-Hong Kong Stock Connect.

 ??  ?? Qi Bin, director of the internatio­nal cooperatio­n department at the CSRC
Qi Bin, director of the internatio­nal cooperatio­n department at the CSRC

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States