Foreign-owned
investment funds were more lucrative than domestic ones in
September, with the appreciation of the Chinese currency, or the
yuan, contributing to one sixth of their yields, Xinhua-run Shanghai Securities News
reports on Thursday.
Funds
managed by Qualified Foreign Institutional Investors (QFIIs) gained
an average profit of 5.77 percent in September, compared with 5.08
percent of monthly profit made by domestic funds, the paper
reports.
The
higher yields of the foreign-owned funds partly derived from the
appreciation of yuan, which in September gained 0.63 percent
against the US dollar, 0.78 percent against the HK dollar, 0.92
percent against the yen and 1.57 percent against the
euro.
QFIIs
earned more than 20 billion yuan (US$2.5 billion) in China in the
past three years, said sources with the China Securities Regulatory
Commission.
By
August, they had invested 55.4 billion yuan (US$6.93 billion) in
China, while their combined assets had risen to 75.5 billion yuan
(US$9.44 billion).
China
has
awarded investment quotas totaling US$8 billion to 50 QFIIs since
2003 when it began to allow overseas institutional investors to
enter the Chinese capital market.
Regulators
have promised to increase the quotas to US$10 billion and grant
QFII status to more overseas investors.
(Xinhua News Agency October 13,
2006)
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