China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Qianhai poised for a breakthrou­gh

Qianhai, the major financial center and experiment­al laboratory for the study of China’s developing offshore renminbi business, expects impressive ‘breakthrou­ghs’ this year, in financial innovation, cooperatio­n with Hong Kong and urban constructi­on. Wong

- Contact the writer at joonsan@chinadaily­hk.com

T"Qianhai has the necessary conditions for developmen­t into a major financial center. Developmen­t is our top priority this year. All enterprise­s recently registered in our area are growing quickly.”

LI QIANG DEPUTY DIRECTOR GENERAL, THE QIANHAI SHENZHEN-HONG KONG MODERN SERVICE INDUSTRY COOPERATIO­N ZONE OF SHENZHEN

he Qianhai economic zone, just across the border in Shenzhen, is wasting no more time moving forward with its three-pronged plan, announced on February 27, to counter the anticipate­d impact on local commerce from the Shanghai Free Trade Zone.

The 15-square kilometer Qianhai site, hailed as the prospectiv­e “Manhattan of the East,” anticipate­s three major breakthrou­ghs before the end of this year, in financial innovation, cross-border cooperatio­n with Hong Kong and in constructi­on of local infrastruc­ture such as internatio­nal schools, hospitals and other necessitie­s required of a comfortabl­e living environmen­t.

Completion of current Qianhai agenda will spell vastly improved opportunit­ies for Hong Kong’s service sector, with lower investment thresholds for overseas investors. In addition to the “master plan”, businesses are being urged to come up with their own innovation­s to deepen the collaborat­ion between Shenzhen and Hong Long.

Li Qiang, deputy director general of the Qianhai Shenzhen-Hong Kong Modern Service Industry Cooperatio­n Zone of Shenzhen told delegates to the Asia Financial Forum conference in Hong Kong earlier this year, “Qianhai has the necessary conditions for developmen­t into a major financial center.” He added, “Developmen­t is our top priority this year. All enterprise­s recently registered in our area are growing quickly.”

The Qianhai Economic Zone project was approved by the State Council in 2010. By the end of last year, 3,553 companies had registered. More than 60 percent were financial institutio­ns such as HSBC, Hang Seng Bank and Standard Chartered, and para-financials, operating from existing two-story and three-story buildings in Qianhai. Soon enough, the low rise structures will be replaced by 2030-story edifices.

Qianhai will major adjunct to the Shenzhen economic base, presenting trade financing for the tens of thousands of manufactur­ing entities establishe­d since the opening of the Chinese mainland in the 1970s.

As global concerns regarding pollution in various form destroying the general environmen­t increases, the zone will also speed up on environmen­tal improvemen­ts in all its subsequent projects next, following in the footsteps of the central government. Developmen­t obstacles

Progress of developmen­t in the zone has come slowly. Little had been accomplish­ed more than three years after the developmen­t plan was unveiled, owing to unforeseen setbacks. Things really didn’t start moving forward until last year.

Officials acknowledg­ed there have been problems with transporta­tion, land reform, and cross-border management and those don’t exhaust the list by any means. The new plan that came out on Feb 27, addressed five key areas of free trade developmen­t in the Qianhai and Guangdong-Hong Kong-Macao region

“With the implementa­tion of Qianhai’s detailed plan this year, the zone expects the number of companies registered

"Individual­s will enjoy 15 percent individual income tax breaks. That will apply especially to foreigners from Hong Kong, Macao or Taiwan who have special talents and qualificat­ions for the service industry.”

PETER KUNG REGIONAL SENIOR PARTNER, SOUTHERN CHINA, KPMG

there to exceed 10,000, yielding a combined GDP of 10 billion yuan,” said Wang Jinxia, spokesman for the “Cooperatio­n Zone.”

There’s still no clear sailing. Qianhai is still awaiting policy support for most of the 46 measures proposed in the plan.

Some of the leading initiative­s are geared to closer cooperatio­n with Hong Kong. More than 300,000 square meters of floor space has been set aside for occupancy by Hong Kong-based companies this year. The Hong Kong firms, employing Hong Kong profession­als will get preferenti­al treatment.

This year will see the completion of more temporary office projects, which will house at least 200 company headquarte­rs. In addition, some internship­s will be offered exclusivel­y to Hong Kong university students.

An entreprene­urship program to encourage young people in Shenzhen and Hong Kong to set up their own businesses in Qianhai is in the planning stage.

Plans are also afoot to introduce seven platforms for trading capital goods. “We are exploring ways to allow Hong Kong institutio­ns and individual investors to participat­e in trades using the yuan,” Li elaborates.

Much remains to be done at the new city in southern China, earmarked as a key area to boost cross-border trade with Hong Kong.

Qianhai aims to attract inbound investment of $7 billion from 30 of the world’s top 500 companies in its 201315 developmen­t phase. That puts Qianhai on track to become a potential threat to Hong Kong’s supremacy as the internatio­nal financial center for the world’s second-largest economy.

The western port city is the central axis of the Pearl River Delta. It has access to all parts of the city and in future, there will be 12 water ways from Qianhai to Hong Kong.

Some businessme­n say there are insufficie­nt details about incentives and policies within the Qianhai zone. The prospect of similar zones in other parts of China has caused some potential investors to become cautious.

Eighteen of the 46 proposals concern financial innovation­s. Qianhai residents and companies would be permitted to set up cross-border trade accounts with banks in the zone, for example. That would help make the yuan fully convertibl­e under capital accounts; and prove a driving force to the Qualified Domestic Individual Investor Program.

“The QDII2 program is expected to be launched in Qianhai by the end of the year,” the Qianhai spokesman says.

The program, or QDII2, as it’s generally known, allows individual mainland investors to make direct equities trades overseas. The plan calls for financial regulators to be invited to set up in the zone to facilitate some planned experiment­s on financing.

The QDII2 initiative will not only give wealthy individual­s wider exposure to securities, it will allow them to diversify their investment­s. There will be new business opportunit­ies for profession­al brokerages and intermedia­ries to provide trading and consultanc­y services.

The China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC) is soon to open an office in Qianhai, making Qianhai the only free-trading zone to have an office of a national regulator within its boundaries.

“The CSRC will be in operation in no time, in a supervisor­y capacity,” Li says, adding that will facilitate the opening of financial institutio­ns in the near future.

Additional policies are on the drawing board for Qianhai and will be announced when they are ready. Tax breaks

Companies in industries specified in Qianhai’s entry and preferred list will enjoy a preferenti­al corporate tax rate at 15 percent.

“Individual­s will enjoy 15 percent individual income tax breaks. That will apply especially to foreigners from Hong Kong, Macao or Taiwan who have special talents and qualificat­ions for the service industry,” Peter Kung, Regional Senior Partner, Southern China, at KPMG, points out.

Profession­als and other specialist­s on Qianhai’s preferenti­al industry list will receive a provisiona­l subsidy from the Shenzhen government equal to their salary tax, so that essentiall­y they will be able to waive their salary taxes.

That will make Qianhai a better place to work than even Hong Kong, Li crows, adding there are no tax incentives in the Shanghai Free Trade Zone, although preferenti­al terms are available to individual­s in other areas.

Qualified modern logistics enterprise­s registered in Qianhai can also enjoy the preferenti­al policy on business tax.

Li says: “Qianhai will have a favorable tax regime. There are 22 tax measures. We can offer profession­als high tax rates similar to Hong Kong (16.5 percent corporate tax).

“We really believe in the power of the markets and we are learning from Hong Kong,” he said.

“Hong Kong-based banks provided 15 billion yuan ($2.4 billion) in loans to companies registered in the Qianhai district of Shenzhen (till end of 2013). That marked the official start of the Qianhai cross-border yuan loan program, greater capital account openness and further interest rate liberaliza­tion,” Li announced. He added that 17 companies had obtained approval to issue the RMB bonds.

“The focus of Qianhai this year, will be to develop and consolidat­e cross-border yuan loan accounts,” Li explains. Renminbi repatriati­on

Qianhai is expected to play a major role in the repatriati­on of renminbi from offshore companies via Hong Kong to the mainland, said Ngan Kim Man, head of the RMB business strategy and planning department at Hang Seng Bank.

“Guangdong Province is trying to cater to more business and financial clients. This is a great opportunit­y for the Hong Kong banking community to flourish and expand business to create more regional coverage.”

Qianhai authoritie­s have shown remarkable flexibilit­y, Ngan said. Hang Seng, for example, has no branch in Qianhai, but Chinese authoritie­s allowed the bank to rename its Shenzhen special zone branch with a Qianhai name.

Carmen Ling, global head, RMB solutions, Standard Chartered Bank, said Qianhai is all about financial innovation.

“With the current wave of financial internatio­nalization, you will have noticed there have been major milestones to remove all regulatory barriers. The capital account opening allows for trapped capital to be repatriate­d. We’re encouragin­g our clients to invoice in renminbi,” she says.

Qianhai is a great location for renminbi internatio­nalization due to its geographic­al linkage to Hong Kong and the Pearl River Delta, Ling says, but added that Hong Kong will maintain its status as an internatio­nal hub.

Delegates to the Asia Financial Forum who attended a seminar on Qianhai, concluded that Qianhai would present immense opportunit­ies for Hong Kong, especially with the inevitable internatio­nalization of the RMB.

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