Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Chinese officials promote Hong Kong at investment conference

- ZEN SOO THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

HONG KONG — Chinese regulators downplayed China’s real estate slump and slowing economic growth while Hong Kong’s top leader pitched Hong Kong as a unique link to the rest of China at a high-profile investment summit last week.

About 200 global financial executives gathered to network and discuss issues such as global risks and sustainabl­e finance at Hong Kong’s first major conference since the city lifted covid-19 quarantine restrictio­ns.

Fang Xinghai, vice chairman of the China Securities Regulatory Commission, urged those attending to visit China to understand what is happening in the country and urged them not to “bet against” China and Hong Kong.

Internatio­nal media “don’t really understand China very well” and have a “short-term focus,” he said, drawing laughter and applause from the audience.

Fang and other Chinese officials addressed the conference in prerecorde­d interviews — travel to and from mainland China is constraine­d by strict quarantine requiremen­ts.

China’s central bank governor, Yi Gang, said that inflation remains subdued, at under 3% compared with 8% or more in many Western economies, and the country’s economic and reform policies will continue. Such comments appeared to be meant to counter worries that flared following a Communist Party congress last month, where leader Xi Jinping was awarded an unpreceden­ted third fiveyear term and key reformers were excluded from top ruling party leadership.

“China has a super large market, as there is still much room for urbanizati­on and the demand of middle class consumers is still on the rise,” said Yi.

China’s economy grew at a 3.9% annual pace in the last quarter compared to a year earlier, well below an official target of more than 5%, and the vital real estate sector has languished as regulators have sought to curb debt mounting toward unsustaina­ble levels.

Xiao Yuanqi, vice chairman of the China Banking and Insurance Regulatory Commission, sought to reassure those attending the conference, saying property loans make up just 26% of banks’ total lending and 90% of property loans were “good quality.”

The speakers lineup at the Hong Kong conference included Morgan Stanley CEO James Gorman, Goldman Sachs CEO David Solomon and other leading executives from institutio­ns such as Citigroup and Blackstone.

The event was designed to highlight the former British colony’s role as an attractive and competitiv­e financial hub.

The city remains the “only place in the world where the global advantage and the China advantage come together in a single city,” Hong Kong Chief Executive John Lee said in opening the event.

“This unique convergenc­e makes Hong Kong the irreplacea­ble connection between the mainland and the rest of the world as the center of economic gravity in the world shifts eastward,” he said.

The British handed control of Hong Kong to China in 1997 with the understand­ing that Beijing would allow the tiny territory autonomy in its legal system and economic policies for at least 50 years. In recent years Beijing has been expanding its influence. Such efforts gained momentum after mass protests in 2019 demanding a more democratic system of leadership, culminatin­g in the implementa­tion of a security law designed to quash dissent.

Combined with strict quarantine controls and a sharp downturn in tourism, that has compounded the economic impact from the pandemic.

Lee said the “worst is behind” Hong Kong. A former security chief, he told the conference “law and order has returned” and social disturbanc­es were in the past.

Hong Kong pulled out all the stops for the financial conference, adjusting covid-19 restrictio­ns to allow participan­ts to dine in at specific restaurant­s. Most other inbound travelers are banned from doing so for three days after they arrive in the city.

Attendees who test positive for covid-19 are allowed to leave by chartered flights if they want to, instead of having to be isolated for at least seven days in Hong Kong.

Some U. S. lawmakers urged American companies not to participat­e in the meeting given tensions with China over trade and human rights. The U.S. has been vocal about Hong Kong’s crackdown on dissent following implementa­tion of the National Security Law.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States