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在线翻译:
szdaily -> Markets -> 
First public REITs close to approval
    2021-01-14  08:53    Shenzhen Daily

CHINA plans to approve its first real estate investment trusts (REITs) to help local governments finance infrastructure projects while allowing retail investors to tap into what may become a US$3 trillion market.

The regulators may authorize the first few REIT products and get them listed as soon as the first quarter under a trial that began in August, according to people familiar with the matter.

A handful of infrastructure projects, including a sewage disposal plant operated by Beijing Capital Co., a waste-to-energy electricity generator by Shougang Group and three public transportation projects, are on a shortlist, though names are still being finalized. More projects could be added.

China Securities Journal reported that China may roll out such REITs in the first half, while other domestic media said the first batch will involve five unidentified projects.

The trial promises to offer mom-and-pop investors a slice of infrastructure projects and their revenue streams. It’s a major step after more than a decade of deliberations. With retail investors financing highways, bridges and business parks, local governments could also alleviate their debt strain.

REITs have become popular around the world among investors seeking access to the real estate sector. The publicly traded trusts typically offer people access to shopping malls and office towers, paying out the vast majority of their income to investors in yields in the range of 4 to 8 percent.

In China, the trial will focus on infrastructure projects like highways and utilities. The pilot will also include businesses focusing on logistics, data centers and 5G.

While traditional real estate isn’t included in the pilot, Goldman Sachs said the program paves the way for including property projects in the longer term and that the market could be worth as much as US$3 trillion one day.

Unlike other countries, China is introducing a framework that allows individual investors to buy shares in a mutual fund, which then invests in asset-backed securities that indirectly hold the infrastructure assets.

China’s top economic planning agency will recommend shortlisted projects to the securities regulator. Approved projects will be devised and sold by mutual funds, and then traded on stock exchanges.

(SD-Agencies)

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