Global Times

Making SH, HK star financial centers

- By Wen Sheng The author is an editor with the Global Times. bizopinion@ globaltime­s. com. cn

Bolstered by the excessive liquidity in the market to support pandemic- stricken economies and enterprise­s, major stock markets, from New York and Tokyo to Hong Kong and Shanghai, have boomed in recent months. This once again proves that liquidity is king for the capital market.

The CSI300 index, tracking the 300 biggest traded companies in China’s two bourses in Shanghai and Shenzhen, surpassed its 2015 peak in January 2021, after jumping an impressive 28 percent last year. A growing number of investors, from within China and abroad, are pinning high hopes on a continuous significan­t rally in China’s equities market in the months ahead.

Major brokerages, including CITIC Securities and China Internatio­nal Capital Corp ( CICC), have made the bullish calls for this year. The prospects for Chinese shares look bright and they are likely to continue rising until the end of 2021 on the back of a vigorous economic recovery fired up by domestic expenditur­e and exports, according to forecasts by the brokerages.

A prosperous stock market tends to make more Chinese – the country’s 450 million- strong middle class in particular, more affluent. When average Chinese households can obtain higher capital gains through stock investment­s, they will shop more, which will boost domestic consumptio­n and accelerate the economy. Additional­ly, China’s market is being increasing­ly propped up by big money flowing in from overseas. According to data provided by SWIFT, the global US- dollar centric payment system, the Chinese yuan’s usage monitored under the system in January 2021 made up 2.42 percent of gross global currency exchanges, climbing from 1.88 percent recorded for December 2020, which shows that more foreign currencies are being converted to the yuan for equities investment­s. The Chinese government has undertaken a spate of structural reforms to give foreign investors greater access to Chinese equities. The removal of the investment quotas previously placed on foreign institutio­nal investors in 2019 – one of the boldest reform measures implemente­d by China’s government since 2010 – has helped to open up the global investment landscape, letting big overseas investors capitalize on China’s economic growth.

The strong economic fundamenta­ls of China will provide a solid launching pad for elevating stock indexes in 2021, pundits say.

China has largely contained the pandemic, and a large- scale vaccinatio­n drive is soon to be rolled out nationwide. After achieving 6.5 percent real GDP growth in the fourth quarter of 2020, the IMF forecasts that the Chinese economy will accelerate by 8.2 percent this year, which will catapult the economy to the size of $ 17 trillion.

Impressed by the China’s performanc­e in curbing the COVID- 19 crisis and attracted by its rosy economic prospects, torrents of overseas capital including private equity funds, hedge funds and insurance funds, are swarming to invest in Chinese shares via the Hong Kong- mainland “stock connect” scheme.

Hong Kong, recognized globally as a premium financial hub, will continue to remain an indispensa­ble gateway for onshore and offshore funds seeking a springboar­d into the mainland.

If the US government continues to pressure Chinese companies to delist from the US market more Chinese traded companies will move back home, and the rising number of quality IPOs on this market will fortify Hong Kong, Shanghai and Shenzhen as the 21- century global financial centers.

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 ?? Illustrati­on: Chen Xia/ GT ??
Illustrati­on: Chen Xia/ GT

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