Under new chief, China's
securities regulator pushes fixes ahead of MSCI deadline
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[June 10, 2016]
By Michelle Price
HONG KONG (Reuters) - China's
securities regulator has rushed through stock market rule changes
under its new chairman in a bid to persuade MSCI to include domestic
Chinese shares in one of its global benchmarks.
The New York-based index provider will announce on June 14 if China
has done enough to overcome investor concerns, which were heightened
by its heavy-handed response last year to a stock market crash.
A decision to allow yuan-denominated shares - or A shares - into its
widely used Emerging Markets Index, could draw $400 billion into
Chinese shares in the next decade, MSCI estimates show.
Still, while China has met some key requirements of the MSCI, other
concerns remain unaddressed, investors and people familiar with the
discussions said, making the widely anticipated decision far from
certain.
The MSCI told China last June that it needed to increase access to
its equity markets and fix other rules to win foreign investor
backing for inclusion in the benchmark, tracked by $1.5 trillion in
assets globally.
Scepticism China could satisfy the requirements deepened owing to
unprecedented intervention by authorities during last summer's stock
market crash. As shares slumped more than 40 percent in a few
months, more than half of Chinese companies suspended their stocks
to avoid the slide.
Over the past four months though, the China Securities Regulatory
Commission (CSRC) has stepped-up its efforts to woo global benchmark
providers under a new reform-focused senior management team led by
Chairman Liu Shiyu, investors and people familiar with the
discussions said.
A CSRC spokesman said an MSCI Emerging Markets Index without A
shares was a "shortcoming" and the regulator would be happy to see
them included.
Shiyu, a former chairman of the Agricultural Bank of China and
former deputy governor of the People's Bank of China (PBOC), was
appointed to the top CSRC job in February, replacing Xiao Gang, who
had been widely criticized for mishandling the stock-market crisis.
Since Shiyu's appointment, the CSRC has satisfied two of MSCI's key
demands; introducing restrictions on company share suspensions and
clarifying the beneficial ownership rights of foreign investors
under China's cross-border investment schemes.
"The CSRC had previously been pretty slow at working out
liberalization issues," said Ivan Shi, head of research at
Shanghai-based investment consultancy Z-Ben Advisors.
"Everyone is more on the same page regarding market opening and the
CSRC has responded to many of MSCI's requirements."
Last June, the MSCI and the CSRC said they would create a working group to
address MSCI's concerns. Neither party has provided details about the working
group.
Discussions were slow to start as the CSRC dealt with the market crash, said
people briefed on the matter. Key CSRC managers also left, making it difficult
to schedule meetings, and a CSRC roadshow to woo U.S. and European investors was
postponed, they said.
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Investors look at computer screens showing stock information at a
brokerage house in Shanghai, China, April 21, 2016. REUTERS/Aly Song
But they picked up gear from February, said people briefed on the matter. One
source said Shiyu attended some of the meetings. MSCI also fielded top
executives and its global chief executive, Henry Fernandez, visited regulators
in Beijing in April, three people briefed on the matter said.
MSCI declined to comment.
GAPS
While many foreign investors harbor worries over inclusion, investment banks are
more bullish. Goldman Sachs, for example, said in May there was a 70 percent
chance MSCI would add the shares to its major index, citing the steps taken by
China to remove investment obstacles.
Still, China has yet to address another MSCI concern, which is to remove rules
that require foreigners get permission from the Shanghai and Shenzhen exchanges
to launch A share hedging products.
Nor does the CSRC have the power to address all of MSCI's concerns. The PBOC and
the State Administration of Foreign Exchange control the size of investment
quotas and have played a central role in liberalizing the country's $81 billion
Qualified Foreign Institutional Investor (QFII) scheme and its yuan equivalent,
RQFII.
Neither the PBOC nor SAFE were immediately available to comment on Friday, a
public holiday in China.
Under the QFII scheme, China has yet to lift a 20 percent net monthly cap on
capital repatriation, one of MSCI's last remaining concerns. A Hong
Kong-Shenzhen stock connect system has yet to be announced, a route that would
allow two-way trade and which foreign investors expect to dramatically open up
the market.
"The problem is that there is not just one regulator involved," said one person
with direct knowledge of the discussions. "But I am convinced they are trying to
meet our requirements."
(Reporting by Michelle Price; Editing by Lisa Jucca and Neil Fullick)
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