Chinese regulators try to assure sceptical foreign financiers
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[June 08, 2023] By
Jason Xue and Joe Cash
SHANGHAI/BEIJING (Reuters) - China is open for investment, the country's
top financial regulators told foreign financiers at a high-profile forum
in Shanghai on Thursday, as concerns mount among foreign firms that they
may no longer be welcome.
The world's second-largest economy, keen for foreign investment to
support its reopening after three years of COVID-19 restrictions, has
played host in recent months to high-profile overseas CEOs including
Goldman Sachs Group's David Solomon and Tesla's Elon Musk.
But scepticism runs deep, as Sino-U.S. tensions intensify around
flashpoints from Ukraine and the South China Sea to U.S. semiconductor
export curbs and data security, while President Xi Jinping's focus on
national security brought a recent crackdown on foreign consultancies
and due diligence firms.
"We warmly welcome foreign-funded institutions with sound operations and
excellent qualifications to expand their business in China," Li Yunze,
head of China's National Financial Regulatory Administration, said in
his first public remarks since his appointment at the newly established
agency.
"Opening up is China's long-term national policy, and the door of
China's financial industry will only be opened wider and wider."
He was speaking at the annual Lujiazui Forum, where senior
representatives from HSBC , Credit Agricole , Merrill Lynch, Mizuho
Financial , Schroders and Paypal are also scheduled to speak.
China's top financial regulators have consistently stressed how open
their markets are. Li told Citigroup CEO Jane Fraser exactly that in
Beijing on Monday.
Yi Huiman, chairman of the China Securities Regulatory Commission, told
forum participants that China will "adamantly" push for deregulation in
terms of market access, institution qualification and products.
But staff at foreign chambers of commerce and trade associations in
China complain of "promise fatigue" among their membership.
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Li Yunze, director of China's National
Financial Regulatory Administration (NFRA), speaks at the Lujiazui
Forum in Shanghai, China June 8, 2023. REUTERS/Jason Xue
"There's a charm offensive, but are they backing it up with any
actual black-and-white meaningful policy changes?" said Noah Fraser,
managing director of the Canada China Business Council.
"No."
SELF-SUFFICIENCY
Echoing the message of openness in Shanghai, Xi told local officials
at an industrial park in China's northern region of Inner Mongolia
to cooperate with the outside world for "mutual benefits," state
media reported, telling them to implement a high level of openness.
Drawing attention to the region's proximity to Russia and Mongolia,
Xi instructed officials to "play a greater role in connecting the
domestic and international links in the 'dual circulation'
strategy," an initiative to reduce China's dependence on overseas
markets and technologies in its long-term development.
First put forward by Xi in 2020, the "dual circulation" strategy
would see China rely mainly on "internal circulation" - the domestic
cycle of production, distribution, and consumption - for its
development.
Internal circulation will be supported by "external circulation," as
in foreign financing and China's interactions with the global
economy.
"We will make all the efforts to give investors access to truthful
and transparent listed companies (in China)," said Yi in Shanghai.
Yet, China's industries must ultimately be self-sufficient in their
scientific and technological capabilities, Yi said.
(Reporting by Shanghai newsroom; Writing by Joe Cash; Editing by
Shri Navaratnam,Edmund Klamann and Kim Coghill)
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