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Trade war hasn’t stopped Wall Street’s Us$9bil China rush

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EXECUTIVES from the biggest US financial firms, including Jpmorgan Chase & Co and Goldman Sachs Group Inc, are scheduled to meet top regulators in Beijing in a sign that the trade war with the US has done little to derail China’s opening of its US$43 trillion financial system.

Among those scheduled to attend at the Ritz-carlton hotel on the city’s Financial Street will be Yi Gang, governor of the People’s Bank of China (PBOC) and senior officials from the China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC), according to the meeting’s agenda, which was seen by Bloomberg.

Even as the trade war rages, China has continued to open its financial sector at an unpreceden­ted pace, luring global banks seeking to compete for an estimated Us$9bil in annual profits.

While the policy has often been cast as addressing US complaints that the Asian nation has been a one-sided beneficiar­y of trade, domestic motivation­s are also behind the push, said Michael Pettis, professor of finance at the Guanghua School of Management at Peking University.

“China is very determined to reform its financial markets and knows that without the major American players, it is very hard to talk about having a truly internatio­nalised market,” he said. “It also makes sense for China to accommodat­e a very important source of lobbying support, especially as there’s so little in the US right now.”

Representa­tives for Jpmorgan and Goldman Sachs declined to comment, while the PBOC and CSRC didn’t immediatel­y respond to requests for comment sent outside of regular business hours.

Forcing change

Chinese regulators can’t ignore the country’s financial-market issues. Corporate bond defaults reached a record high last year and the nation’s banks are seeing their balance sheets swell with ever more bad loans. Publicly-traded companies have come under increased scrutiny as a spate of poor disclosure­s – from inaccurate IPO applicatio­ns to an accounting “error” that wiped out Us $4.4bil – left investors wary. Officials and academics say an influx of foreign competitor­s could help the industry get into shape and also sharpen the focus on just doing business.

“Opening up is a way of putting pressure on financial-system reforms, especially considerin­g the many competing interest groups,” said Li Haitao, dean’s distinguis­hed chair professor of finance at Cheung Kong Graduate School of Business in Beijing.

Foreign firms wouldn’t be burdened by the policy-oriented tasks, such as lending targets for private firms or rural industries that domestic firms need to take heed of, Zhang Chenghui, former head of the finance institute at the State Council Developmen­t Research Centre, said at a recent conference in Yichun, suggesting that local firms may be allowed to shed these duties as the market opens to foreign competitio­n.

Other scheduled attendees at yesterday’s meeting in Beijing included China Vicefinanc­e Minister Liao Min, CSRC vice-chairman Fang Xinghai, Goldman Sachs chief operating officer John Waldron and Morgan Stanley’s global head of internatio­nal business, Franck Petitgas, according to the agenda.

Ken Griffin, who runs the hedge-fund firm Citadel, and Alan Macdonald, citigroup Inc’s vice-chairman, were also on the list, along with Chris Heady, chairman of Blackstone Group Inc’s Asia unit.

Senior Wall Street executives attended a meeting with Chinese policymake­rs in Beijing in September 2018, people familiar with the matter said at the time. That meeting was chaired by former PBOC governor Zhou Xiaochuan and John Thornton, chairman of Barrick Gold Corp.

China’s transition to a more consumptio­n-driven economy has lead to a shrinking trade surplus – a trend that could be accelerate­d by the trade war. As more and more Chinese are also lifted into the middle class and beyond, the need for managing that wealth is growing.

Daniel Rosen, a partner at Rhodium Group LLC, an economic research firm based in New York, said the transforma­tion of China and the limits of its policies, will likely mean “trillions of dollars” in capital outflows in the years ahead.

“To avoid balance of payments challenges, Beijing needs to attract correspond­ingly large capital inflows, and is plunging ahead with financial sector opening with this longterm reality in mind,” he said.

Wall Street allies

Crucially, opening up could also allow China to make friends with people in the right places at a time of heightenin­g political tension.

Bloomberg Intelligen­ce estimates that – barring a major economic slowdown or change of course – foreign banks and securities companies could rake in profits of about Us$9bil a year in China by 2030. The increasing ties between Wall Street and the Chinese market could make some of its executives important voices for China in Washington.

Even so, opening up the financial sector may not go far enough in addressing the core concerns of the current US administra­tion.

“You would need a full slate of credible reforms across core areas of political and national security concerns before you moved the needle in D.C.,” said Jude Blanchette, chair of China studies at the Centre for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies in Washington. “We’ve seen these narrower measures pretty consistent­ly over the last year and they have not had an impact on the US position.”

Costly and cumbersome

There are still significan­t hurdles in setting up shop in China. The latest central bank data showed that foreign participat­ion in the local financial market is still small, accounting for just 3.1% of the stock market and 2.2% of its bond market. Foreigners held 1.6% and 5.8% of banking and insurance assets, respective­ly, as of May.

“Certain business licence applicatio­n processes, such as those for majority ownership in securities businesses, still require large upfront capital commitment­s and face a lengthy review process, many of which disadvanta­ge foreign investors,” the American Chamber of Commerce said in its 2019 China White Paper.

Foreign financial executives also complain about the difficulty in competing against government-controlled rivals with longstandi­ng relationsh­ips.

As another round of high-level trade talks is set to take place next month, more opening is expected in China’s financial sector. Most recently, regulators allowed foreign companies to be lead underwrite­rs for all types of bonds, and control

entities including wealth management firms and pension fund managers.

“Further liberalisa­tion of China’s financial services market is in the interest of China’s regulators because it raises the standards of the overall domestic market,” said Jake Parker, senior vice-president at the Us-china Business Council.

“The US is effectivel­y pushing on an open door in this area.” — Bloomberg

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