China scrutinizes quant strategies as market weakness stokes public
anger - sources
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[September 21, 2023] SHANGHAI
(Reuters) -As China's stock market struggles to recover, regulators have
started to probe some hedge funds and brokerages on quantitative trading
strategies amid a growing outcry against a sector able to profit from
share price falls and volatility, sources said. The China Securities
Regulatory Commission (CSRC) has checked with several major brokers over
the past weeks about short-selling activities and trading strategies of
their quant clients - funds that trade rapidly using derivatives and
data-driven computer models, two people with direct knowledge of the
probe said. Separately, the Shanghai and Shenzhen stock exchanges, under
the CSRC's guidance, have sought information from major quant funds on
their money-making strategies, another source said. "They want to know
the logic of the trading (strategy), the source of the profit; under
which situation you hold net long, or net short positions ... and the
reason behind buy and sell orders," the source said.
The sources declined to be named as they are not authorized to speak to
media. Both bourses, in response to Reuters queries, said descriptions
of the probe were not factually accurate, while the CSRC did not respond
to requests for comment.
Global quant fund houses including Winton and Two Sigma have operations
in China, but it's not clear if the foreign players are being probed.
The latest regulatory scrutiny comes after a slew of market-friendly
measures - including a stamp duty cut - failed to drive a sustainable
rally in a struggling market that is down roughly 5% year-to-date.
The weakness has triggered finger-pointing in social media, as well as
criticism from fund managers and retail investors against these quant
funds and short sellers.
The CSRC had earlier this month vowed to increase scrutiny over program
trading, and some fear fresh probes could lead to tighter regulations on
short-selling and certain financing activities by hedge funds. The
regulatory review is not without precedent. During China's 2015 market
crash, Beijing almost shut down the index futures market and blamed
shortsellers for the turmoil.
PROBE Quant funds in China exceeded 1.08 trillion yuan ($147.94 billion)
at the end of 2021, nearly doubling in size from a year earlier,
according to a report compiled by institutions including Huatai
Securities. Some of China's biggest quant funds include High-Flyer Quant
Investment, Yanfu Investments LLC and Shanghai Minghong Investment
Management Co.
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A man wearing a protective mask is seen inside the Shanghai Stock
Exchange building, as the country is hit by a new coronavirus
outbreak, at the Pudong financial district in Shanghai, China
February 28, 2020. REUTERS/Aly Song/File Photo
A better understanding of various quant strategies may lead to
regulators curbing those that contribute to market volatility, said
one of the brokerage sources. Short-selling activities by quant
funds could also be caught in the crossfire, he said.
"Brokerages in China are more willing to lend securities to quants
for shortselling due to their active trading and commission
contributions. But it's unfair to other market players who hardly
have access to securities lending," said Yuan Yuwei, fund manager at
Water Wisdom Asset Management.
The regulatory inquiry is still in its early stage and no conclusion
has been made, three of the sources said.
LEVERAGED BETS Regulators have also asked for data around Direct
Market Access (DMA), sources said. Through DMA, hedge funds in China
can borrow money from brokerages to fund leveraged bets. Borrowing
$1 only requires a minimum of 25 cents in deposits. "DMA easily
raises eyebrows as it involves high leverage, and allows quant funds
to make a lot of money," said a brokerage source. Another brokerage
source said the CSRC asked them to elaborate on the size of their
quant clientele and whether quant trading had impacted the stock
market recently. Yang Tingwu, vice general manager of asset manager
Tongheng Investment, supports tighter rules for quant funds, arguing
many Chinese quants make lucrative bets on poorly managed companies
based on momentum signals, rather than fundamentals. Quant strategy
is a neutral tool, but "in China, it's being used to provide
liquidity to the bad guys," he said, referring to listed firms with
poor governance.
($1 = 7.3002 Chinese yuan)
(Reporting by Shanghai Newsroom; Editing by Shri Navaratnam and
Jacqueline Wong)
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