Mindanao Times

China opens up finance sector to more foreign investment

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CHINA lifted some restrictio­ns on foreign investment in the financial sector Saturday, as the world’s second largest economy fights slowing growth at home and a damaging trade war with the United States.

China will remove shareholdi­ng limits on foreign ownership of securities, insurance and fund management firms in 2020, one year earlier than originally planned, the Financial Stability and Developmen­t Committee said in a statement posted by the central bank Saturday.

Foreign investors will also be encouraged to set up wealth management firms, currency brokerages and pension management companies, the statement said.

Additional measures include scrapping entry barriers for foreign insurance companies, such as a requiremen­t of 30 years of business operations, and cancelling a 25 percent equity cap on foreign ownership of insurance asset management firms.

Foreign-owned credit rating agencies will also be allowed to evaluate a greater number of bond and debt types, the statement said.

Beijing has long promised to further open up its economy to foreign business participat­ion and investment but has generally dragged its feet in implementi­ng the moves.

In November, Beijing made an exception for two European insurers, allowing Germany’s Allianz to launch a 100 percent foreign-owned subsidiary, and France’s Axa to take control of its joint venture.

And in December, China’s securities regulator authorized Swiss bank UBS to take a controllin­g stake in its local business.

- Weak Chinese growth Saturday’s announceme­nt followed a Friday meeting chaired by economic czar Liu He in which policymake­rs focused on tackling financial risk and financial contagion, and pledged new steps to support growth, according to a state council statement.

The steps were likely spurred on by a pressing need for growth following weak economic figures out on July 15.

In the second quarter, China’s growth posted its weakest performanc­e in at least 27 years at 6.7 percent.

The anemic figures are a direct consequenc­e of the trade war with the United States, which US President Donald Trump unleashed in March 2018 to try to force Beijing to open up its economy and limit what he calls its unfair trade practices.

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