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QINGDAO TODAY
在线翻译:
szdaily -> Markets -> 
Investors prepare for MSCI’s new inclusion
    2018-09-03  08:53    Shenzhen Daily

THE inclusion of Chinese stocks in MSCI’s benchmark indexes this year has made mainland equities more attractive to foreign buyers, but exposure to global investment has also revealed some rough edges around corporate China’s governance standards.

Global index publisher MSCI Inc. will add another tranche of Chinese mainland stocks to its emerging markets index today, which follows the milestone debut inclusion in June, and foreign investors are queuing up to get into the asset class.

Since the first tranche, the number of foreign investors in China has jumped about 30 percent, according to exchange data, despite the market volatility triggered by worsening Sino-U.S. trade relations.

Still, global asset managers say Chinese companies leave a lot to be desired, including some basic practices such as making disclosures in English and shorter share trading suspensions.

“It’s pretty obvious some companies are not ready to have interactions with an investor base outside the mainland,” said Zhang Jin, a New York-based portfolio manager at Vontobel Quality Growth Boutique.

Zhang complained that most Chinese companies don’t publish financial reports in English, making it difficult for such stocks to pass Vontobel’s rigid stock-screening process.

Zhang’s fund recently bought Chinese stocks such as liquor heavyweight Wuliangye and is looking for other opportunities.

MSCI’s unofficial estimates indicate the two-stage inclusion will see inflows of roughly US$17 billion into Chinese shares. But after the second tranche this week, A shares will still only comprise a tiny 0.8 percent of its emerging market index.

While active fund managers have leeway in allocating funds to China, whose main index is down 17 percent this year, mangers of passive portfolios that track the MSCI indexes will have to include the roughly 230 Chinese companies in the benchmark.

China’s securities regulator has said it is working toward giving local stocks greater index weightings and supports a potential China accession into FTSE Russell’s global share benchmarks.

The country has been gradually opening its markets to global investors. However, only around 5 percent of the stock market is currently held by foreigners.

Eugenie Shen, head of the asset management group at the Asia Securities Industry & Financial Markets Association, said it has been lobbying Chinese regulators for more transparency and efficiency. (SD-Agencies)

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