|
China, well known for its capital controls made some steps towards loosening
those controls for individual investors last month with the announcement that
individual mainland Chinese investors would be able to invest in the HK stock
market. However, now it appears the
implementation will be another few days or weeks off according to an
announcement by the Bank of China (BOC).
To understand the impact of these changes, for a moment, imagine
yourself a
wealthy mainland Chinese entrepreneur. You've been incredibly
successful in the
manufacturing business (hopefully not in toys) and now you're wondering
where to put all your new found wealth as your mattress is stuffed.
Well, China isn't the easiest place to
invest. The government doesn't allow you to invest (legally) abroad, so
you
have to invest domestically in either the frothy real estate market or
the even
frothier stock market. With valuations on both of those choices getting
into
the irrational end of the spectrum, you're a bit stuck.
Now of course, you could just assume that economic cycles don't matter and
China's real estate and stock markets are immune from historical boom-bust
cycles that all the other markets are subject to, which some people are
thinking. A smart investor though would be looking for diversification, which
these changes will give you...at least a little bit.
Once BOC starts the program, you’ll be able to open an account with a BOC branch
in Tianjin (NE of China) and an account with BOCI Securities Ltd. in HK, which
is BOC’s HK brokerage arm. Once both accounts are opened, you can take some of
your manufacturing profits and invest them in the HK market. The program is
being trialled in Tianjin though agreements with other branches of
BOC, will allow investors from all over China to invest.
It will be interesting to see how this plays out. A-shares* in Shanghai are nearly 4 times
overvalued as compared to their HK H-share counterparts, so there’s a lot of
speculation that there will be a big adjustment as capital flows from the
Shanghai market to HK as people may rebalance their portfolio and move from
A-Shares to the more sensibly valued H-shares.
Whatever the outcome, it’s a step in the right direction for the economy and
will hopefully ease a little bit of the pressure on the excess domestic liquidity and
yuan appreciation (even though most of this comes from China’s tremendous trade
surplus made up of things like...well, toys).
* In case you’re unfamiliar, the shares traded on the mainland Shanghai
exchange are called A-shares and are typically not open to non-Chinese individual
investors. Shares on the HK exchange are called H-shares and are more open to
foreign investment. A Chinese company will often have listings on both the HK
and Shanghai markets and hence have both A and H-shares.
|