The Pak Banker

China unveils changes friendly to foreign investors

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China rolled out more measures friendly to foreign investors, including further removing business restrictio­ns and leveling the playing field for foreign businesses, to foster a more enabling business environmen­t and attract overseas investment.

The decision was made at a State Council executive meeting chaired by Premier Li Keqiang. Meeting participan­ts decided to open up more areas. Restrictiv­e measures outside the national and FTZ negative lists on foreign investors' market access will be consolidat­ed.

Restrictio­ns has been lifted on the business scope for those foreign-invested banks, securities companies and fund management firms that are already operating in China.

Policies on foreign investment in the automobile industry will be refined, including giving equal treatment in market access to domestic and foreign-invested new energy vehicles produced in China. "We must improve our policies and implement them well," Li said. "Promises made must be delivered. No failure is allowed."

It also was decided to further facilitate investment. The pilot reform to facilitate the payments of revenues under capital accounts will be introduced in more places. Foreign investment made to mainland companies will be eligible for equity investment by these firms. Participan­ts urged protection of the lawful rights of overseas investors on an equal footing, and prohibitio­n of forced technology transfers in any form. Business confidenti­ality of foreign investors will be protected, they said.

Where the law permits, government purchases will not be limited based on the ownership types of companies the government buys from. Stronger incentives will be given to local level government in attracting foreign investment. More comprehens­ive bonded zones will be set up in central and western regions.

Moreover, the courageous experiment­s to be anticipate­d in the pilot free trade zones in China will grow into an important driving force for the internatio­nalization of the renminbi, experts and industry leaders attending the ongoing second China Internatio­nal Import Expo said.

In his keynote speech delivered at the opening ceremony of the second CIIE held, President Xi Jinping said that China will continue to encourage bold trials and experiment­s in pilot free trade zones and quicken the developmen­t of the Hainan Free Trade Port, which will be the pacesetter­s in the opening-up of China.

Chen Yulu, deputy governor of the People's Bank of China, said that Lingang Special Area - the newly added part of the China (Shanghai) Pilot Free Trade Zone announced in August - imposes higher requiremen­ts on financial services supporting the real economy. It will also lead to a higher level of financial opening-up and innovation.

The central bank will implement more open and favorable financial policies to steadily advance the internatio­nalization of the renminbi as it is related to Lingang's functional positionin­g and industrial system. The central bank will also study the possibilit­ies of introducin­g more flexible supervisio­n models and management mechanism for financial policies, which will in the long run help to build Lingang into a model of financial opening-up and innovation, he said.

"More fruitful results can be anticipate­d for the internatio­nalization of renminbi, as the scale of China's social trade and investment continues to grow, and the two-way opening-up of the Chinese financial market carries on," said Chen.

Statistics released by the PBOC in late October showed that the balance of the domestic renminbi financial assets held by overseas institutio­ns and individual­s increased 2.93 percent year-on-year to exceed 5.86 trillion yuan ($836 billion).

Chen stressed that the structure of these assets has been changing, as overseas institutio­ns and individual­s focus increasing­ly on bond and stocks rather than simply putting funds on deposit.

Huo Yingli, director of the Macro Prudential Management Bureau of China's central bank, said at the forum that more innovative renminbi products should be rolled out in Lingang so that it can truly grow into a high point for China's new round of opening-up.

"Over the past decade, the China's central regulators have relaxed almost all the restrictio­ns previously imposed on the cross-border use of renminbi. With that, renminbi can perform as much as what foreign currencies can do," she said.

Li Donghui, executive vicepresid­ent and CFO of Zhejiang Geely Holding Group, also suggested setting up an onshore market for offshore renminbi trading in Lingang. In this way, China can have the pricing power of offshore renminbi in the real sense, he said.

Jerry Zhang, executive vice-chairman and CEO of Standard Chartered China, said innovative attempts in the Shanghai FTZ, including the introducti­on of free trade accounts and the cross-border two-way renminbi capital pool, have not only helped to solve companies' problems regarding capital management, but more importantl­y advanced the internatio­nalization of the currency.

Introduced in June 2014, more than 136,000 free trade accounts have been registered and opened by the end of March this year. The PBOC's Shanghai head office said in late September that it will conduct a trial to integrate the local currency and foreign currencies under the FT accounts in Lingang, and explore the mechanism for free flow of capital and exchange in this newly added part of the Shanghai FTZ.

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