The Chinese authorities Thursday released a detailed regulation on
foreign-exchange issues related to the Qualified Foreign
Institutional Investors (QFII) scheme.
The rule, designed by the State Administration of Foreign Exchange
(SAFE), came out two days before the formal launch of the
experimental scheme that will open up the domestic A-share and bond
markets to foreign institutional investors, according to Friday's
China Daily.
It
clarified foreign-exchange management systems for the accounts and
quotas used for QFII investment, as well as remittance of capital,
liabilities of the custodians and the supervisory role of the
government. The regulation is a supplement to a circular issued
three weeks ago that gave the go-ahead to the QFII program and set
up the initial framework.
Under the new rule, each qualified foreign investor can only open
one special Renminbi account to facilitate securities trading in
China. The investor can apply for an investment quota that equals
something between 50 million US dollars and 800 million US
dollars.
The QFII program is a transitional mode in the opening-up of the
securities market before the Renminbi becomes freely convertible in
China.
Risk control is crucial to the program, so the Chinese government
has to work out a detailed scheme to avoid the inflow of
international hot money that would hurt the financial soundness of
the country, a SAFE spokesperson said.
(Xinhua News Agency November 29, 2002)
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