China moves to boost languishing markets by ordering funds to invest
more in shares
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[January 23, 2025] By
ELAINE KURTENBACH
BANGKOK (AP) — The Chinese government is trying to encourage people to
spend more by ensuring that share prices will rise, ordering pensions
and mutual funds to invest more in domestic stocks to help jolt its
languid markets out of the doldrums.
Officials told reporters in Beijing on Thursday that beginning this year
mutual funds should increase holdings of onshore stocks, called
A-shares, by at least 10% a year over the next three years.
Commercial insurance funds will have to put 30% of their annual new
premium revenue into share markets beginning this year, they said.
“This means that at least several hundred billion yuan of long-term
funds will be added to A-shares every year,” said Wu Qing, chairman of
the China Securities Regulatory Commission.
The announcement followed a meeting of top financial officials including
ministries in charge of pensions and the central bank.
“Implementing the plan's various measures will further enhance the
equity allocation capacity of medium- and long-term funds, steadily
expand the scale of investment, improve the supply and structure of
funds in the capital market, and consolidate good conditions for the
capital market’s recovery,” Wu said.
The ruling Communist Party announced this move just ahead of China’s
biggest holiday of the year, the Lunar New Year, which begins on
Wednesday, Jan. 29. It’s a time when families tend to splash out on food
and travel and little red packets of money for children and young
adults, a time of wishes for good fortune.
Markets in Hong Kong and Shanghai rose early Thursday after the
announcement but then shed those gains. The Shanghai Composite index
closed 0.5% higher while Hong Kong's Hang Seng index fell 0.4%.
China's share markets are huge but they hit their peak value before the
2008 global financial crisis and have meandered well below that level
since. A lack of gains in share prices, along with falling housing
prices, has discouraged Chinese families from spending, slowing consumer
demand and economic growth.
Less than 5% of household wealth in China is held in equities, compared
with nearly 30% of household wealth in the United States. Chinese
markets, which were set up in the early 1990s, have tended to serve as
fundraising vehicles for state-run companies that have launched massive
share offerings but remain under control of the ruling Communist Party.
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People tour by a popular Hutong alley decorated with lanterns and
Chinese well wishes calligraphy ahead of the Lunar New Year in
Beijing, Wednesday, Jan. 22, 2025. (AP Photo/Andy Wong)
So far, the government's efforts to
get people to spend more and save less have had mixed success. An
initiative to promote purchases of energy efficient vehicles and
appliances by paying subsidies to people who turn in their old
versions of such items has boosted sales of such products. But share
prices had traded stubbornly within a narrow range after a
brief-lived rally late last year.
Wu said pension funds will be required to revamp how they assess
their performance and companies will be encouraged to conduct more
share buybacks and pay higher dividends to give shareholders better
returns.
“This is a very important institutional breakthrough for the entry
of medium- and long-term funds into the market. It can be said that
it has solved a problem that has been unsolved for many years,” he
added.
On Wednesday, the government announced 20 measures meant to
encourage foreign investment in Chinese markets aimed at
facilitating more cross-border investments. Foreign investors
account for about 4% of total market value of equities in China,
according to the Bank for International Settlements, while such
investment accounts for about a fifth of market value in the U.S.
and 30% in Japan.
Sell-offs by foreign investors and major shareholders and high
market volatility have handicapped the Chinese markets, Lei Meng, a
China equity strategist at UBS Securities, said in a commentary
Thursday.
So, “the willingness of long-term investors to participate in the
stock market has dwindled,” Lei said. “The proposal of market value
management reform directly addresses this issue because it is
directly related to investors’ sense of gain.”
But such moves have often failed in the past, since they attempt to
override prevailing market sentiment by government orders.
“As we’ve seen in the past, such efforts can be likened to
attempting to kindle a fire with damp wood — often proving
ineffective and short-lived,” Stephen Innes of SPI Asset Management
said in a commentary.
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