China to double foreign investment programme quota to $300bn

Qualified Foreign Institutional Investor scheme boosted from $150bn to meet investment demand from abroad, Beijing says

A man checks on his mobile phone near the main entrance gate of the Ministry of Commerce in Beijing, Wednesday, Jan. 9, 2019. U.S. and Chinese envoys extended trade talks into a third day Wednesday after President Donald Trump said negotiations aimed at ending a tariff war were "going very well!" (AP Photo/Oliver Zhang)
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China will double the quota for the country's foreign institutional investment programme, as Beijing talks up financial reforms amid stock market weakness and slowing economic growth.

The State Administration of Foreign Exchange, the foreign exchange regulator, said on Monday it would increase the quota for the Qualified Foreign Institutional Investor (QFII) programme to $300 billion from $150bn to meet investment demand from abroad. The QFII programme, however, has struggled to use up even the existing $150bn quota. In December, overseas investors received quotas - the amount each investor is allowed to invest under the scheme - worth $101.1bn.

Jim McCafferty, head of equity research, Asia Ex-Japan at Nomura, said the QFII announcement was an "incremental" change.

"For some individual investors that are invested in the QFII programme, it's indicative of a more relaxed and more responsive government to getting those overseas investors in," he said.

In contrast, index changes taking place this year, including higher weighting of Chinese A-shares in MSCI indexes, are "very, very crucial" for boosting foreign capital flows, Mr McCafferty added.

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Fang Xinghai, vice chairman of China's securities regulator, said at the weekend that inflows into the Chinese stock market could double to $88.8bn in 2019 due largely to greater inclusion of A-shares in global indexes.

Inflows into China's bond market, the world's third-largest, are also set to rise with the phased inclusion of Chinese yuan-denominated government and policy-bank bonds in the Bloomberg Barclays Global Aggregate Index starting in April.

The QFII programme was first introduced in 2003 to allow foreigners to invest in China, but has since been partially superseded by the Stock and Bond Connect schemes linking Hong Kong and mainland markets. The QFII quota offers the potential to invest beyond traded securities.

The benchmark Shanghai Composite index fell nearly 25 per cent last year, making it among the world's worst-performing major equity indexes, amid signs of slowing growth and an escalating trade war with the United States.