China may allow its offshore-listed tech giants to sell a form
of shares on the mainland, or China depositary receipts (CDRs),
people with knowledge of the plan have said, in a move that
would pit Shanghai and Shenzhen against Hong Kong in the battle
to host the country's tech giants.
Expectation of the move has already stirred investor interest,
with money gushing into shares listed on the tech-heavy start-up
board ChiNext Composite Index <.CHINEXTP>.
E Fund ChiNext ETF <159915.SZ>, China's biggest exchange-traded
fund that tracks the start-up board, has seen its assets under
management (AUM) jump 70 percent this year to 8.79 billion yuan
($1.39 billion).
(GRAPHIC: E Fund ChiNext ETF - http://reut.rs/2FhfLAg)
Its smaller rival, Hua An SZSE ChiNext 50 ETF Fund <159949.SZ>,
saw its size jump nearly six-fold to 1.65 billion yuan.
(GRAPHIC: Hua An SZSE ChiNext 50 ETF Net Asset History - http://reut.rs/2D1qOaI)
Other major ChiNext ETFs, including GF ChiNext ETF <159952.SZ>
and China Southern ChiNext Index <159948.SZ>, also saw heavy
inflows this year.
(GRAPHIC: GF ChiNext ETF - http://reut.rs/2FhRMwA)
(GRAPHIC: China Southern ChiNext Index ETF - http://reut.rs/2Fgq3MJ)
ChiNext shares have jumped more than 12 percent over the past
month, compared with a fall of over 2 percent in the blue-chip
CSI300 Index <.CSI300>.
That is a reversal of fortune from last year, when the ChiNext
tumbled 11 percent but the CSI300 surged 22 percent.
(GRAPHIC: ChiNext outperformance - http://reut.rs/2FiTGB2)
(Reporting by Samuel Shen and John Ruwitch; Editing by Vidya
Ranganathan and Himani Sarkar)
[© 2018 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2018 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
 |
|