China's national social security system is expected to be allowed
to start investing in stocks this year, a move that will expand its
resources and increase overall investment in the bourses.
More than 30 billion yuan (US$3.6 billion) of fresh funds will
gradually enter the market this way and more local pension funds
will follow soon.
This is the Chinese Government's first attempt at a securities
investment scheme for social security funds, which faced a huge
deficit, but were limited to either making bank deposits or
purchasing treasury bonds.
The market-driven experiment will start with the national
foundation, which was set up two years ago by the State Council as
a special agency to handle social security funds and now controls
about 80 billion yuan (US$9.7 billion) of funds, said Cui Shaomin,
a researcher at the Social Insurance Research Institute of the
Ministry of Labor and Social Security.
According to a document drafted by the State Council last June, as
much as 40 per cent of the national foundation's funds can be
invested in stocks and 10 per cent can be put into bonds.
"Concrete investment activities should start within the year,
though the exact timing is still to be decided," said Zhao Xinyu,
an official at the China Asset Management Co, one of the six
companies chosen in December to be the foundation's fund
managers.
Zhao said the chosen fund management companies are still to sign a
formal contract with the foundation council to facilitate the
investment and relative investment proposals being made.
He
stressed that the foundation should target medium and long-term
investment, rather than speculate for supposed short-term gain.
If
the macro-economic outlook remains robust, this should guarantee
better returns than bank deposits or treasury bonds.
He
added that the injection of fresh institutional funds will greatly
increase fund supply in the bourses and strengthen sentiments after
more than a year of bearish market performance.
But, outside the national foundation, many social security funds,
including pension funds, medical and unemployment insurance, still
belong to local government. These funds are currently banned from
entering the stock market, but the curbs will gradually be lifted
in the future to ensure better returns, Deputy Labor and Social
Security Minister Liu Yongfu told a Shanghai seminar on Monday.
After the national social security foundation's move into stock
investments, some of the individual account pension funds, which
receive monthly contributions from both employees and employers,
will also get access to the bourses.
(China Daily January 22, 2003)
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